INVISIBILITY CLOAK

Posted by Dave Enoch On May - 02 - 2009

Would'nt that be amazing to be invisible. The scientists have kept a step forward and made a cloak which is called an invisibility cloak which neither absorbs nor reflects light making the body invisible. This can lead to invisible suits which are going to be available in the market but may be expensive at the start.

FIRST PLASMA TRANSISTOR

Posted by Dave Enoch On May - 02 - 2009

Scientists finally fabricate the first plasma transistor.Though this is not good enough to be used in the commercial systems but this has made a path to use them in future.
In the plasma transistor, the electron emitter injects electrons in a controlled manner into the sheath of a partially ionized neon gas (the plasma). The scientists discovered that even a voltage as low as 5 volts can change the properties of the microplasma, including quadrupling the current and increasing the visible light emission.

500GB Optical Disc

Posted by David On May - 02 - 2009

The storage capacity of micro-holographic discs that the normal DVDs or the blue-ray discs because the micro-holographic discs store information in a 3D way rather than just putting it onto the surface of the disc.
G.E(General Electrics) has made dramatic changes in the material to increase the reflectivity of the surface.If the reflectivity of the surface increases then the amount of information that can stored automatically increases.

NANO-CLOTH NEVER GETS WET

Posted by David On May - 02 - 2009

If you were to soak even your best raincoat underwater for two months it would be wet through at the end of the experience. But a new waterproof material developed by Swiss chemists would be as dry as the day it went in.
Lead researcher Stefan Seeger at the University of Zurich says the fabric, made from polyester fibres coated with millions of tiny silicone filaments, is the most water-repellent clothing-appropriate material ever created.

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FAS CAMERA MONITORING BLOOD

Posted by gamer On 1:57 AM
SOURCE PHYSORG.COM

Burns or other disorders that disrupt the blood flow in tissues will soon be easier to assess thanks to a camera that is capable of imaging blood circulation in real time. Compared to an earlier version, the new optical perfusion camera (TOPCam) from Twente, the Netherlands, is a significant improvement with regard to speed, so that even small variations in blood circulation are immediately visible.
Researchers of the Institute for Biomedical Technology (BMTI) are publishing an article on the camera in the March number of .
After earlier successful tests at the Martini Hospital in Groningen, the Netherlands, the researchers have made a number of significant improvements to the camera. The speed of the earlier version was commended by doctors and nurses, but real-time images of variations in the were not yet possible. They are now, though, according to researcher Wiendelt Steenbergen: “We can now see rapid variations in , too, for example when the circulation gets going again after of an arm or after a transplant.” The measured reaction gives an immediate impression of the condition of the vascular bed.

A continuous recording of the blood circulation of the hand
of a healthy test person; the graph (above) shows the average
blood circulation, and b through d show the entire situation
the period of time on the graph: the heart beat can be observed.

The researchers were able to reach these high speeds by using a broad laser beam to simultaneously illuminate the entire area of skin in question. Images are made of the tissue with a high-speed camera. Laser light that is scattered by moving red blood cells gives variation in the clarity of the pixels as a result of the Doppler Effect. Up till now it had been a problem transferring all the data to the computer quickly enough, but real time images are now enabled by making better use of the camera memory.

Now that the newest modifications have been made, the camera is ready for clinical application, Steenbergen says. The TOPCam is also suitable for other applications such as the assessment of blood circulation in diabetics.

More information: The article Twente Optical Perfusion Camera: system overview and performance for video rate laser Doppler perfusion imaging by Matthijs Draijer, Erwin Hondebrink, Ton van Leeuwen and Wiendelt Steenbergen is appearing in the March number of Optics Express.

Provided by Universiteit Twente

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