MIT Unveils New 'Blackest Black' Material and Makes a Diamond Disappear (cnet.com) 52
An anonymous reader shares a report: What do you do with a $2 million natural yellow diamond? If you're at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, you coat it in a wild high-tech material that makes any object look like it fell into a black hole. The coated diamond is now a piece of art called The Redemption of Vanity, a collaboration between Diemut Strebe, artist-in-residence at the MIT Center for Art, Science and Technology, and Brian Wardle an MIT aeronautics and astronautics professor. The diamond will be on exhibit at the New York Stock Exchange until Nov. 25, giving viewers a chance to see MIT's new carbon nanotube material in action. "The unification of extreme opposites in one object and the particular aesthetic features of the CNTs caught my imagination for this art project," Strebe said in an MIT release. MIT described the carbon nanotubes as "microscopic filaments of carbon, like a fuzzy forest of tiny trees" that's grown on an aluminum foil surface. "The foil captures more than 99.96 percent of any incoming light, making it the blackest material on record," MIT said.
Important facts (Score:4, Informative)
Everything that you wear that you think is black is just very dark green or very dark red, because black dye does not exist. The only true black in the world is the heart of a dragon.
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Everything that you wear that you think is black is just very dark green or very dark red, because black dye does not exist.
Well, according to Sterling Archer [wikipedia.org], there's Dark Black and Slightly Darker Black [youtube.com] -- at least with Turtleneck -- I mean, Tactleneck [youtube.com] -- sweaters.
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Careful, arguing about black dyes on the internet is a zone of danger.
It's all fun and games ... (Score:1)
... until someone dyes.
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I've never seen Burt Reynolds wear a turtleneck. Just saying.
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The only true black in the world is the heart of a dragon.
Or that of my ex
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I wonder how warm these extremely black materials (Score:2)
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Since they are absorbing almost all the light, they must radiate a decent amount of heat.
I guess Hotblack Desiato [fandom.com] will like this because it's hot and black -- especially useful for Disaster Area's [fandom.com] stunt ship, as it dives into the Sun. Black on black -- markings, labels, decorations, etc... -- is the new black.
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That thing is so damn black, I think if you look at it in the IR spectrum you'll see it in 4D.
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An object that absorbs 99.9% of the light that falls on it absorbs about 11% more light than an object that absorbs 90% of the light that falls on it. So it's total heat flux (the radiant emittance) will be about 111% that of a 90% absorber. Radiant emittance varies as the fourth power of the absolute temperature. If you're talking about a reference (90% grey) body which is at NTP (20 degC, 293.15 K), then the 99.9% grey object would be at (NTP temperature)*(1.11)^(1/4) Kelvin. That's a
Smooth marketing (Score:3)
It's smooth, as long as the Marketing person who thought of that stunt is the first person to drive it on public roads at night.
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Good point. If it wasn't for the front grill and license plates, it would just look like a couple of head lights and tail lights going by.
If electric, it would be very silent too.
Even just parked at night on the street, it would actually be quite the hazard.
Hah! Suck, Kapoor (Score:5, Informative)
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Thanks. Came to this thread to post something about that rat-faced Kapoorian.
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This is why (Score:2)
This is why we haven't encountered any other intelligent life in the universe.
Every civilization gets to this point. When they create black hole nano tube materials and paint it on a yellow diamond.
Then BOOM gone forever, they don't listen.
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I suppose you could build a giant Dyson sphere and coat the outside with a material that absorbs all wavelengths and you'd essentially make yourself invisible
Ever heard of Black-body radiation [wikipedia.org]?
Captures 99.96% (Score:4, Funny)
It seems doubtful it captures 99.96% of incoming light. If that happened it would be pretty dark outside.
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But eventually it will capture all the light and it will be like the dark side of the moon. In fact it will be all dark.
Wait, an invisible $2M diamond... (Score:2)
David Copperfield's kind of invisibility (Score:2)
How do we know? (Score:2)
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You can trust them. They are MIT.
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Marvin Minksy affirms that fact.
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Men in Teal?
Black cars not so bright selection (Score:3)
Yes, but what's most important is... (Score:2)
...does it make me look thin?
Would make for a good plot device on White Collar (Score:1)
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Also, nowadays, artificial = higher quality. (Score:1)
Nowadays, the only way to tell a natural diamond from an artificial one, is that the natura one has flaws. Which makes the whole thing a *complete* farce.
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On exhibit at the New York Stock Exchange? (Score:2)
Excellent, let's hope the bankers realize their wealth will disappear equally when we extract the politicians from their pockets.
Asbestos is pretty too (Score:2)
Study Says Carbon Nanotubes as Dangerous as Asbestos
https://www.scientificamerican... [scientificamerican.com]
Well, duh. (Score:1)
Asbestos is just "bigger nanotubes". Long thin razor-sharp sticks of crystal, that get stuck in your lungs, and become a lung blender whenever you move.
Carbon nanotubes are the same, except much smaller. So you get a meat slurry instead of minced meat. ;)
Yeah, this shit will ultimately get banned, unless covered in some clear resin, front, sides, and back.
It's, like, how much more black can it be (Score:2)
Red door (Score:2)
Can somebody explain the diamond demo? (Score:2)
No Spinal Tap references yet? (Score:2)
Son, I am disappoint.
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https://science.slashdot.org/c... [slashdot.org]
Correction for percentage (Score:1)