By Patricia Daukantas
Starting today (September 1), Thomas Edison’s most famous invention has been banned in most of Europe.
European Union countries have halted the sale of incandescent light bulbs for household use in favor of compact fluorescent lamps (CFLs). (Halogen bulbs, though they are less energy-efficient than CFLs, are not included in the ban.)
In recent weeks, the impending prohibition has spurred some consumers to stockpile the incandescent bulbs, although stores are allowed to sell off their remaining stock. Some critics also charge that light-sensitive people, or persons with certain medical conditions, react poorly to the emission from CFLs. According to one British press report, some families say they will exploit a loophole in the new law that allows specialized industrial uses of incandescent bulbs and try to get the bulbs from those suppliers.
In the United States, new energy-efficiency rules for light bulbs will go into effect in 2012. However, if researchers can boost the efficiency of incandescent lamps sufficiently by then, the bulbs won’t become extinct in Edison’s native land. “Blackening” tungsten lamp filaments with laser light, as demonstrated by University of Rochester (New York, U.S.A.) researchers, may increase the efficiency of incandescent bulbs.
Posted on September 1, 2009 20:33 by
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Categories: 2009-08 August
By Patricia Daukantas
On August 25, 1609, Galileo Galilei showed off his new astronomical telescope to Venetian merchants and lawmakers, so the International Year of Astronomy 2009 collaborators (along with Google) are celebrating the 400th anniversary of the telescope today.
As noted in this blog earlier this year, 2009 has been filled with exciting outreach projects to get the public involved in all aspects of skywatching. The Franklin Institute of Philadelphia (U.S.A.) is in the final weeks of displaying one of Galileo’s original telescopes. The International Year of Astronomy even has its own hit song in Japan.
OPN’s March 2009 feature article on cutting-edge amateur astronomy mentioned a worldwide observing campaign to study the mysterious binary star known as Epsilon Aurigae. Two astronomers, amateur Jeff Hopkins and professional Robert Stencel, want to get as much data as possible during the star system’s eclipse, which happens only every 27.1 years. This month, Stencel and collaborators have launched a new Web site, Citizen Sky, which provides all the tutorials and guidelines to help members of the public collect scientifically useful observations of the variable star – even without a telescope or binoculars.
In honor of today’s anniversary, the Guardian (U.K.) science blog suggests, “Let’s hear it for the inventors and the toolmakers.” Indeed.
Posted on August 25, 2009 22:02 by
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Categories: 2009-08 August
By Patricia Daukantas
For most of a decade, researchers have been pursuing organic LEDs (OLEDs) as a useful material for flexible displays, solar panels and even data storage. Now, a group based in Illinois (U.S.A.) says that inorganic LEDs (ILEDs) offer possibilities for ultrathin lighting and display systems that are brighter than their organic cousins.
Writing in last Friday’s Science, John A. Rogers of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) and his colleagues described these thin LEDs, which are constructed from epitaxial semiconductor layers that can be printed onto glass, plastic or rubber substrates.
Existing inorganic LEDs are much thicker than organic diodes, and hence more expensive. An accompanying ScienceNOW article describes the Illinois team’s bulk-manufacturing process, which involves creating the diodes on a temporary layer, then depositing them en masse onto the permanent substrate for integration with conductors and insulators.
Besides UIUC, Rogers’ co-workers are affiliated with Northwestern University (Illinois, U.S.A.), Semprius (North Carolina, U.S.A.), Singapore’s Institute of High Performance Computing and Tsinghua University (China).
Posted on August 25, 2009 19:47 by
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Categories: 2009-08 August
By Patricia Daukantas
Scientists associated with the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) and a separate project called Virgo have refined the upper limit to the background residue of gravity waves that could have been generated billions of years ago in the wake of the Big Bang.
It’s important to note that nobody has actually found gravity waves yet. Researchers have been looking for the “stochastic background” of gravity waves left over from the first few seconds of the existence of the universe. If these waves exist, they could offer a glimpse of physical processes that took place when the very young universe was still opaque to electromagnetic radiation. The non-detection (so far) places constraints on cosmological models and on string theory. LIGO and Virgo researchers reported their finding in the August 20 issue of Nature.
The LIGO project has been featured in plenary talks at a couple of OSA conferences. At CLEO/QELS 2008, David Reitze of the University of Florida (U.S.A.) recounted that Albert Einstein predicted gravity waves in 1916, only to change his mind two decades later. (The audio track and slides from his talk are still available online.) At Frontiers in Optics 2005, OSA’s 89th annual meeting, LIGO deputy director Stan Whitcomb described how the observatory’s Michelson interferometers could measure length changes no bigger than 10–18 m.
Likewise, the Italian-French Virgo interferometer is an incredibly sensitive instrument using ultrastable lasers and the most reflective mirror ever built. Both LIGO and Virgo teams are working on second-generation interferometers at least an order of magnitude more sensitive than the current versions.
Posted on August 22, 2009 00:04 by
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Categories: 2009-08 August
By Patricia Daukantas
Optical tweezers with force-feedback, nanoscale lasers and cloud-level wind measurements from ground level are among the many topics featured in OSA’s peer-reviewed journals over the last few months.
A collaboration of scientists based in France, Scotland and England devised the low-cost optical tweezers, which appeared in the June 8 issue of Optics Express. The combination of a high-speed video camera and an inexpensive haptic interface gives the tweezers’ operator a “feel” for the two-dimensional forces being exerted on a 5-µm-diameter bead in a laser trap. According to a recent Laser Focus World article, the researchers will try to expand the force-feedback into the third dimension. The original OE article, which also appears in the Virtual Journal for Biomedical Optics, comes with a couple of QuickTime movie files showing the forces on the bead as it moves around.
Also writing in Optics Express, a group from Arizona State University (U.S.A.) and Technical University of Eindhoven (the Netherlands) reported lasing in tiny, semiconductor-filled metal-insulator-metal waveguides. The team used an innovative combination of semiconductors and metals, such as gold and silver, to get around the so-called diffraction limit.
Two scientists from the University of Hawaii (U.S.A.) have used ground-based stereo cameras to derive wind speeds in the upper (cloud) layers of the troposphere. According to their article in the August 15th Optics Letters, the pair captured cloud features on successive images taken with specially calibrated cameras set about 150 m apart at the Mauna Loa Observatory. From these images they derived wind speed and direction with errors of generally less than 10 percent for clouds 2 km in altitude.
Every month, OSA’s journals publish hundreds of other articles on optical communications, lasers, spectroscopy, geometrical optics, imaging, metrology, device physics, vision and more. For highlights of the latest content, check out OSA’s new feature, Spotlight on Optics, on Optics InfoBase.
Posted on August 19, 2009 00:27 by
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