The Blackest Material 299
QuantumCrypto writes "Researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute have created 'the world's first material that reflects virtually no light.' This anti-reflection technology is based on nanomaterial and could lead to the development of more efficient solar cells, brighter LEDs, and 'smarter' light sources. In theory, if a room were to be coated with this material, switching on the lights would only illuminate the items in the room and not the walls, giving a sense of floating free in infinite space."
tsk (Score:3, Funny)
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My mother in law once saw a black shirt that said (in a dark brown font) "I'm just wearing this color until they find something darker."
I guess I've found a new material to make a t-shirt out of.
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here [signals.com]
Re: dupe (Score:2, Informative)
Dude, do it with a little style.
Dupe: Reflectivity Reaches a New Low [slashdot.org]
Looks like a fish, (Score:4, Funny)
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I think you got the wrong ship. I believe that one had an infra-pink lizard emblem on the neutrino housing.
To get this out of the way... (Score:5, Funny)
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Or the Hagunenons' horribly beweaponed chamelioid death flotilla.
Or Tycho Magnetic Anomaly 1 (TMA-1 a.k.a. The Monolith).
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(Yeah, and a few minutes ago I misspelled "Hagunemnon". Though, frankly, I'm not sure what the right spelling is; I don't have the radio scripts.)
Outside (Score:5, Insightful)
Outside of that gravity thing. Sounds more like standing outside in the country.
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Re:Outside (Score:5, Funny)
All of my kid's Goth friends are probably rejoycing and wondering when they can get a t-shirt or trechcoat made of this stuff.
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Re:Outside (Score:4, Insightful)
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if you're talking about the key color spilling into the subject (like in between hair and such) than that's a different issue. that's why when you do a telecine, you'll do what's called a "suppress pass" which desaturated all of the key's color. that way you can comp the original footage minus the key color back into the comp to kill the color spill without having to hand-draw it into each frame.
i'm sure it could be used for some pretty interesting techniques in photography and film but color keying isn't likely to be one of them.
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Sine I posted, I realized there are some flaws in my model of the luminance dynamics and in the post-processing, so I have to go rethink that all. My film work was decades ago and mostly industrial anyway.
I wonder if the military already has some form of this material, by the way. Er, probably captured from a crashed saucer, of course. (cough)
4x reflectors (Score:3, Interesting)
Each of the walls reflected 0.1% of the light.... so the entire setup reflected 0.1^4 (%).... or about 'nothing'.
Anyway... The real reason I posted here is there's a guy on Ebay selling virtual backdr
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#GGGGGG (Score:5, Funny)
Re:#GGGGGG (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:#GGGGGG (Score:5, Funny)
Once you go #GGGG, you never go ^H^H^H^H.
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Something Darker (Score:2)
how much more black could this be? (Score:5, Funny)
None more black.
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Dolomite (Score:2, Funny)
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Possible uses for the military? (Score:5, Interesting)
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It says that it reflects virtually no light. I wonder if that includes the frequencies that are used for radar. If it doesn't reflect any radar signals, that could radically change military aircraft. Currently, military aircraft use shape as well as radar absorbing materials to achieve their stealthy-ness. Imagine if you can coat an F-16 with this stuff, and bam, you have a pretty cheap stealth fighter.
To detect this on radar you use two radars in two different positions and look for discrepancies in areas
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In theory, the two radars will not return any signal (From the empty space, and from the aircraft)
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Of course, it's useless for radar, but similar principles are easy at radar frequencies (pretty much subwavelength anechoic tile) but not aerodynamic.
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Maybe not, but they're both electromagnetic waves (though with a very different wavelength). So the question may be relevant.
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The interesting thing about light is that it's NOT radar.
Maybe not, but they're both electromagnetic waves (though with a very different wavelength). So the question may be relevant.
It's not particularly relevant. The wavelength difference between radar and light is in the range of 20000 to one. You need two different antennas to pick up AM and FM, and they are only different by about two orders of magnitude (100:1). Dealing with electromagnetic radiation has everything to do with wavelength. A material "tuned" to absorb the maximum about of EM radiation between 400 and 700 nanometers wavelength is utterly unsuited to the task of absorbing radar at 1-4 centimeters. I'm not trying to b
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He pointed out the obvious and then did nothing with it. Hardly insightful.
Military use? (Score:2)
If it reflects virutally nothing, I wonder how it dissipitates heat, or if heat is even a factor in this.
Re:Military use? (Score:5, Interesting)
Contrary to popular belief, the best color for urban night camoflage is not solid black. Depending on the environment, it's either charcoal grey (for general hard-to-see-ness), or irregularly-patterned greys (to break up the outline of your body).
Re:Military use? (Score:4, Interesting)
Contrary to popular belief, the best color for urban night camoflage is not solid black. Depending on the environment, it's either charcoal grey (for general hard-to-see-ness), or irregularly-patterned greys (to break up the outline of your body).
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Depends on the city of course. Around here, the optimal pattern is a mix of concrete and brick spattered with rat feces and black magic marker grafiti. You'll blend right in.
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I hate to be a warmonger here, but this stuff could probably be used in military applications as well, probably for night ops and the like. A modern day ninja outfit with this stuff comes to mind, or if the stuff could be tweaked to not only absorb light, but radar as well.
If it reflects virutally nothing, I wonder how it dissipitates heat, or if heat is even a factor in this.
It doesn't absorb anything. It's simply several layers of silicon dioxide nanotubes whose index of refraction is controlled by
Display screens? (Score:2)
Blackness (Score:5, Funny)
THERE'S JUST NO POINT ANY MORE! (Score:2, Funny)
None more black (Score:2, Redundant)
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Again? (Score:2)
Doesn't work for me (Score:4, Funny)
Claustrophobics rejoice (Score:5, Interesting)
This stuff could be really cool for use in MRIs or other tight spaces that claustrophobics normally have to go into. It would give those that are normally afraid to be in small spaces the sense that they were in a vastly infinite space. That's pretty cool IMO.
I'd also like to have my home theater coated with this stuff, think about how large your house would feel! Even with low level ceilings.
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I need this stuff (Score:2)
Picture (Score:3, Funny)
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Automated Dup Rating Score Would Help... (Score:3, Insightful)
Ron
Yeah, it looks good, but... (Score:2)
Can't be as black as a really black black pudding! (Score:2)
Yes, it is black today, dear.
Aye, that's very black tha' tis'. Even the white bits are black!
Is it blacker than priests socks? (Score:5, Funny)
TED: Priest socks. Really black ones.
DOUGAL: I read somewhere, I think it was in an article about priest socks that priest socks are blacker than any other type of socks.
TED: That's right Dougal. Sometimes you see lay people wear what look like black socks but if you look closely you'll see they're very, very, very, very, very, very, very dark blue.
DOUGAL: Actually that's true. I thought my uncle Tommy was wearing black socks but when I looked at them closely they were just very, very, very, very, very, very, VERY, very, very, very dark blue.
TED: Never buy black socks in a normal shop. They'll shaft you every time!
Fuligin! (Score:2, Interesting)
As a sysadmin... (Score:2)
It's sooooo black.... (Score:3, Informative)
This would work great for.... (Score:2)
it is so black that... (Score:2)
Fuligin (Score:2)
Energy (Score:2)
Why dupe? (Score:2, Funny)
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LISA: I'm not inferring anything. You infer; I imply.
HOMER: Well that's a relief.
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Not to mention moving us one step closer, possibly, to having a real Holodeck!
Re:Actually... (Score:5, Informative)
to say something "reflects no light" does not mean it "absorbs all light"
you are leaving out transmission of light. If a material does not reflect light, it either absorbs or transmits all the rest of the light.
which is actually what this article is talking about
this was quite an errant post as it is both a dupe and factually flawed.
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(I was going to use the usual "you must be new here" but I looked at your number and decided it wouldn't work...)
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You just duped a story from three days ago. Do you guys even read your own site?
Of course not. They're not actually editors. They're not even nerds. They're a bunch of dumbfuck kids left in charge of what was once an interesting message board. It's not just the Slashvertisements, astroturf articles, and just plain un-nerdy, non-mattering stuff. Have you seen the idiotic poll questions lately? How about the current poll? What kind of true nerd asks "What is your favorite test" and fails to include two of the three grand-daddy nerd tests of all? They got Turing, but that's the obvious o
Re:Is this a record? (Score:5, Funny)
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LIDAR works by bouncing the laser beam off of the highly-reflective license plate. Yes, I suppose you could paint over the plate with this stuff, but then they could just pull you over for driving with an obscured plate
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Seriously, man, we're you actually going anywhere with that crowd control shield thing? Andwhy here?
Re:What does it look like? (Score:5, Funny)
#define noname_width 16
#define noname_height 16
static char noname_bits[] = {
0x00,0x00,0x00,0x00,0x00,0x00,0x00,0x00,0x00,0x00
0x00,0x00,0x00,0x00,0x00,0x00,0x00,0x00,0x00,0x00
0x00,0x00};
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White is the abscence of color.
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Uh huh.
Yeah. Like, really black. Blacker than the blackest black. TIMES INFINITY.
Okay.
And inside of the case is the same black. Also the CD, so when you open the black case what's inside? MORE BLACKNESS!
Right.
Also, make the other side of the CD black too, so you won't even know WHICH SIDE goes down!
You can't do that. The music side has to be shiny.
Aw man. That sucks.