A new multispectral imaging spectrometer capable of simultaneously recording spectral images in the visible and near-infrared has been developed. In this instrument, an acoustooptic tunable filter is used to diffract an unpolarized incident light into two diffracted beams with orthogonal polarization; one of them is detected by a silicon camera for the visible region while the other beam is detected in the near-infrared region (li om I to 1.7 mu m) with a NIR camera. The imaging spectrometer is sensitive, inexpensive, and field deployable because it is based on the recently available InGaAs focal plane arrays camera, which is low cost and can be sensitively operated at room temperature. Preliminary applications of the imaging spectrometer include measurements of the visible and NIR absorption spectra of ink used to print U.S. currency. Such results may help to characterize samples as well as to control and to ensure the quality of the samples during the production processes; More important are the results obtained on ethylene/vinyl acetate copolymers. The NIR spectral images obtained clearly indicate that these copolymers exhibit a high degree of chemical inhomogeneity. Because of the possibility of inhomogeneity, it is very important that the homogeneity of polymers or copolymers be thoroughly understood before the NIR methods, especially those based on NIR spectrometers equipped with a single-element detector, are used for measurements.