Terahertz radiation and metamaterials combine to form super X-Ray specs
It looks like somebody actually coughed up the extra dollar for the De Luxe model X-Ray specs in the back of Mad Magazine, then reverse-engineered 'em in the name of science. That somebody is Richard Averitt, whose team at Boston University has come up with a way to use metamaterials and terahertz transmissions to see through you. We've seen metamaterials plenty of times before, typically being used for nefarious deeds on the opposite end of the spectrum: invisibility cloaks. Here they form pixels for a digital imager that can be activated by THz radiation. If you're not familiar with THz radiation, it's a (supposedly perfectly safe) form of energy waves that pass through materials -- much like X-Rays but without all the nasty DNA-shattering effects on the way through. There's just one problem: nobody (not even this guy) has made a powerful enough THz emitter just yet, meaning we're all safely naked under our clothes for at least another few years.
New 'Metamaterial' Device May Lead to See-Through Cameras and Scanners
Boston University Team Makes Strides in Detecting and Controlling Terahertz Radiation
CLEO/QELS
WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Devices that can mimic Superman's X-ray vision and see through clothing, walls or human flesh are the stuff of comic book fantasy, but a group of scientists at Boston University (BU) has taken a step toward making such futuristic devices a reality.
The researchers will present their device at the Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics/Quantum Electronics and Laser Science Conference (CLEO/QELS: 2010), which takes place May 16 to 21 at the San Jose McEnery Convention Center in San Jose, Calif.
Led by BU's Richard Averitt, the team has developed a new way to detect and control terahertz (THz) radiation using optics and materials science. This type of radiation is made up of electromagnetic waves that can pass through materials safely. Their work may pave the way for safer medical and security scanners, new communication devices, and more sensitive chemical detectors.
Scientists and engineers have long sought devices that could control THz transmissions. Such a device would be a technological breakthrough because it would allow information to be sent via THz waves. Like X-rays, these waves can pass through solid materials, potentially revealing hidden details within. Unlike the ionizing energy of real X-rays, THz radiation causes no damage to materials as it passes through them.
The quest to create devices that emit or manipulate THz radiation is often referred to as a race to fill in the "THz gap," since the frequency of THz radiation on the electromagnetic spectrum falls in between microwave and infrared radiation -- both of which are already broadly used in communication.
This race has often stumbled right out of the blocks, however, because no technologies have proven able to effectively solve the basic problem of manipulating the properties of a beam of THz radiation. Now Averitt and his colleagues have made an important step in this direction by using an unusual class of new materials known as "metamaterials."
Metamaterials are unusual in the way they interact with light, giving them properties that don't exist in natural materials. They have grabbed headlines and captured the popular imagination in recent years after several groups of researchers have used metamaterials to achieve limited forms of "cloaking" -- the ability of a material to completely bend light around itself so as to appear invisible.
Averitt uses these same sorts of metamaterials to interact with and change the intensity of a beam of THz radiation. His device consists of an array of split-ring-resonators -- a checkerboard of flexible metamaterial panels that can bend and tilt. By rotating the panels, his team can control the electromagnetic properties of a beam of THz energy passing by them.
"The idea is that you can manipulate your terahertz beam by reorienting the metamaterial elements as opposed to reorienting your beam," says Averitt.
Arrays of these metamaterial panels could potentially function as pixels on a camera that detects THz radiation, he says. Absorption of THz radiation would cause the panels to tilt more or less depending on the intensity of the THz bombarding them.
"One of the goals, from a technological point of view, is to be able to do stand-off imaging, to be able to detect things beneath a person's clothes or in a package," says Averitt.
Such detection applications, though, would require more powerful THz sources like quantum cascade lasers, which are under development -- though great technological strides have been made in the last few years.
Presentation CtuF3, "Structurally Reconfigurable Metamaterials at Terahertz Frequencies," by Hu Tao and Richard D. Averitt takes place Tuesday, May 18 at 8:30 a.m.
ABOUT CLEO/QELS
With a distinguished history as the industry's leading event on laser science, the Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics (CLEO) / Quantum Electronics Laser Science Conference (QELS) is where laser technology was first introduced. In 2010, CLEO/QELS will unite the field of lasers and electro-optics by bringing together all aspects of laser technology, with content stemming from basic research to industry application. Sponsored by the American Physical Society's (APS) Laser Science Division, the Institute of Electronic Engineers (IEEE) Photonics Society and the Optical Society (OSA), CLEO/QELS provides a holistic reflection of the critical developments in the field, showcasing the most significant milestones from laboratory to marketplace. With an unparalleled breadth and depth of coverage, CLEO/QELS connects all of the critical vertical markets in lasers and electro-optics. For more information, visit the conference's website at www.cleoconference.org.
Boston University Team Makes Strides in Detecting and Controlling Terahertz Radiation
CLEO/QELS
WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Devices that can mimic Superman's X-ray vision and see through clothing, walls or human flesh are the stuff of comic book fantasy, but a group of scientists at Boston University (BU) has taken a step toward making such futuristic devices a reality.
The researchers will present their device at the Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics/Quantum Electronics and Laser Science Conference (CLEO/QELS: 2010), which takes place May 16 to 21 at the San Jose McEnery Convention Center in San Jose, Calif.
Led by BU's Richard Averitt, the team has developed a new way to detect and control terahertz (THz) radiation using optics and materials science. This type of radiation is made up of electromagnetic waves that can pass through materials safely. Their work may pave the way for safer medical and security scanners, new communication devices, and more sensitive chemical detectors.
Scientists and engineers have long sought devices that could control THz transmissions. Such a device would be a technological breakthrough because it would allow information to be sent via THz waves. Like X-rays, these waves can pass through solid materials, potentially revealing hidden details within. Unlike the ionizing energy of real X-rays, THz radiation causes no damage to materials as it passes through them.
The quest to create devices that emit or manipulate THz radiation is often referred to as a race to fill in the "THz gap," since the frequency of THz radiation on the electromagnetic spectrum falls in between microwave and infrared radiation -- both of which are already broadly used in communication.
This race has often stumbled right out of the blocks, however, because no technologies have proven able to effectively solve the basic problem of manipulating the properties of a beam of THz radiation. Now Averitt and his colleagues have made an important step in this direction by using an unusual class of new materials known as "metamaterials."
Metamaterials are unusual in the way they interact with light, giving them properties that don't exist in natural materials. They have grabbed headlines and captured the popular imagination in recent years after several groups of researchers have used metamaterials to achieve limited forms of "cloaking" -- the ability of a material to completely bend light around itself so as to appear invisible.
Averitt uses these same sorts of metamaterials to interact with and change the intensity of a beam of THz radiation. His device consists of an array of split-ring-resonators -- a checkerboard of flexible metamaterial panels that can bend and tilt. By rotating the panels, his team can control the electromagnetic properties of a beam of THz energy passing by them.
"The idea is that you can manipulate your terahertz beam by reorienting the metamaterial elements as opposed to reorienting your beam," says Averitt.
Arrays of these metamaterial panels could potentially function as pixels on a camera that detects THz radiation, he says. Absorption of THz radiation would cause the panels to tilt more or less depending on the intensity of the THz bombarding them.
"One of the goals, from a technological point of view, is to be able to do stand-off imaging, to be able to detect things beneath a person's clothes or in a package," says Averitt.
Such detection applications, though, would require more powerful THz sources like quantum cascade lasers, which are under development -- though great technological strides have been made in the last few years.
Presentation CtuF3, "Structurally Reconfigurable Metamaterials at Terahertz Frequencies," by Hu Tao and Richard D. Averitt takes place Tuesday, May 18 at 8:30 a.m.
ABOUT CLEO/QELS
With a distinguished history as the industry's leading event on laser science, the Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics (CLEO) / Quantum Electronics Laser Science Conference (QELS) is where laser technology was first introduced. In 2010, CLEO/QELS will unite the field of lasers and electro-optics by bringing together all aspects of laser technology, with content stemming from basic research to industry application. Sponsored by the American Physical Society's (APS) Laser Science Division, the Institute of Electronic Engineers (IEEE) Photonics Society and the Optical Society (OSA), CLEO/QELS provides a holistic reflection of the critical developments in the field, showcasing the most significant milestones from laboratory to marketplace. With an unparalleled breadth and depth of coverage, CLEO/QELS connects all of the critical vertical markets in lasers and electro-optics. For more information, visit the conference's website at www.cleoconference.org.






















I could find some good uses for these he he
@MoonWalkerCTE lol that's probably the reason why you have to resort to that
@MoonWalkerCTE
there's already a good use: it's called "night vision with some kodak film"
Hmm – now to look at some hot celebrities,
Ohh NOOO – Here comes Sarah Jessica Parker,
TURN IT OFF, TURN IT OFFFFFFFFFFF
ARGGHHHHHHHHHHHH (Total recall eye explosion)
now wearing iron man suite will make more sense.
@MoonWalkerCTE
So can the TSA. Any day now you'll start seeing airport officials wearing them all over the place and god help you if you start wearing tinfoil around your joojoo
Safely naked?! I think you haven't heard of the TSA full body scanners at the airports!
@who said what Why use a body scanner when you can just wear a ski suit? It feels like you're wearing nothing at all, nothing at all, nothing at all!
@Nod Flenders
Stupid sexy flanders!
@Nod Flenders
+1
@Nod Flenders,
I'd rather wear my Tron suit,
http://mentalfloss.cachefly.net/wp-content/uploads/2007/10/435_tronguy.jpg
"meaning we're all safely naked under our clothes for at least another few years"
Unless we're at an airport, being treated like criminals.
@Othi
Id rather they be overcautious than under because honestly, dyeing on a hijacked plane isnt on the top of my things to do list.
@Adamgs
And your attitude is exactly why the governments can get away with stuff like that.
Essentially, you let the terrorists win, whose goal primarily is to spread fear (which the name 'terror'ist already implies).
@Adamgs Since the bad guys (terrorists etc.) most likely won't play by the rules, it doesn't really matter as much. Just because you ban guns doesn't mean they cant still obtain them.
@Adamgs
"They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety." - Benjamin Franklin
@Adamgs
I'd rather do without the TSA and accept that risk.
Besides the best AQ was able to do was a failed pantie bomb that would not have taken down the plane even if it did go off.
The chances of getting killed by international terrorists are so vanishingly small you're literally a dozen times more likely to die slipping in the shower or on the drive to the airport.
Heck you are more likely to die from bees so should we get rid of those horrible bees too even though they pollinate our crops?
i guess this is how superman really does it, then. i thought it was too good to be true, superman harmlessly firing x rays from his eyes and not making everybody sterile in the process.
probably need at least 1.21 gigawatts of electricity
@sstastic +1 For back to the future reference.
Mr Fusion FTW!
@sstastic
Giga is nowhere near the right scale!
It's all about the Jigas!
Those old glasses from the ads had chicken feathers inbedded between the layers of glass, so all you saw looked like branching lines. Or so I "heard" in the 1970's~
Yeah kids, THz waves can only kill you on odd occurences. So get radiated.
http://science.slashdot.org/story/09/10/30/1216230/How-Terahertz-Waves-Tear-Apart-DNA
@fast
This is a perfect example of slashdot's take on a website's take on a scientific paper.
The arXiv paper clearly states "data strongly suggest that THz-radiation can affect biological function, but only under specific conditions, viz. high power, or/and extended exposure, or/and specific THz frequency."
Also this paper assumes the similarity to a coupled harmonic oscillator, which can be computationally unstable.
@Alexicov
The point is "Do not take everything on the Internet as an absolute truth"
Wouldn't it also see through our skin to our muscles and bones? Gross.
@zeroinfinity2 Yeah, most likely. If something like this ever came to fruition it might be useful to ER doctors for quick treatment.
Oh crap, now everyone's gonna make fun of my small pancreas.
@bill cant fart
That's what she said
Found this in a T-Ray page:
"But no matter how bright they are, T-rays can't penetrate metal or water. So they can't be used to inspect cargo containers on arriving ships or to diagnose conditions deep inside the human body."
@BuzzMega
I see Faraday cloth suits becoming the next big fashion.
http://www.euclidgarment.com/KVGARD/KVGard.html
So are these infrared or UV goggles? If it's really harmless, it would have to be infrared, because you can easily be overexposed to UV, like a sunburn from a tanning bed. I don't think he's going to get very far with infrared, unless he can tune in to very specific frequencies, like in confocal laser scanning microscopy.
Wait.. This isin't April 1'st.. and this isin't google..
Maybe I shouldn't have drank all that gulp.
Someone obviously hasn't seen the back of too many MAD magazines...
@Alexicov That was just one site exposing a hangup point of view contrary to the one exposed here. The fact of the matter is many other sources point out to potential conflicting results.
Why not just use fishline as the matierial is made to blouse
I was just reading that they want to develop Terahertz scanners for the airport- doesn't that mean that anyone with a pair of specs can hang out at the gate and look @ ppl naked?