Sensitive UV Detector Ignores Visible Light 19
techmaven writes: "Scientists at Northwestern University have
developed a new device that detects ultraviolet
light and at the same time ignores visible light. The researchers said that the new detector
could lead to a UV light detector approximately 10 times more sensitive than those now on
the Hubble Space Telescope, allowing astronomers to observe important objects throughout
the universe for the first time."
man that sucks.... (Score:1)
Re:man that sucks.... (Score:1)
revolutionizing voyeurism (Score:1)
[maxmax.com]
document on filtering visible light
Re:revolutionizing voyeurism (Score:1)
Check out this link [utk.edu] for some more information on the em spectrum.
Re:revolutionizing voyeurism (Score:1)
Thanks for catching me on that, it was 6:30 am after a LONG night. I was just trying to put a link with my posts like a good boy. It was hard locating voyeurism technology pages. I bet there could be some good things coming out of UV radiation.
vossman
That's cute! (Score:1)
Re:That's cute! (Score:1)
As for everything else, go ask the predator
Trek IV (Score:1)
Radical improvement- (Score:3, Interesting)
Going from 5% efficiency to anything better than 10% would be an incredible leap. The filters they talk about are 'cutting' filters - you create them by depositing thin films of MgF or other salts on the surface of a piece of optical glass- multiple coats builds up a pass region while allowing destructive interferance to cancle out what you don't want.
The advantage is these can be turned sideways 45 degrees to 'reflect' the unwanted light to another detector (or in the case of IR, into a heat sink to dump it), but it also distorts the signal. Better to reflect it straight back.
This also has the advantage of going to fiber as well- encode a UV signal into a fiber optic (assuming your refraction index is high enough) and you can double or triple bandwidth.
It truly is a very important work - now if they can get it to work at 'space' temperatures and hard vaccuum
Cancer cell detector? (Score:1)
I find this a little oversimplified - there are normal skin cells that are 10x larger than cancer cells. Besides, there are more specific high throughput methods for screening cells already in development, such as "gene chip" style arrays that can determine whethercancer related genes are turned on or not.
Nothing new here (Score:1)