ScienceIQ.com

The Minor Planets

Asteroids are rocky fragments left over from the formation of the solar system about 4.6 billion years ago. Most of these fragments of ancient space rubble - sometimes referred to by scientists as minor planets - can be found orbiting the Sun in a belt between Mars and Jupiter. This region in our solar system, called the Asteroid Belt or Main Belt, ...

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MinorPlanets
Geology

Rock, Mineral, Crystal, or Gemstone?

Rocks and minerals are all around us and used every day, perhaps without us even being aware of them. Besides making up the solid, supporting surface of the earth we live and move upon daily, rocks ... Continue reading

RockMineralCrystalGemstone
Engineering

Bicycle Chain for Fleas

Sandia National Laboratories has engineered the world’s smallest chain. The distance between chain link centers is only 50 microns. In comparison, the diameter of a human hair is approximately 70 ... Continue reading

FleaBicycle
Biology

Life In The Extreme

Lowly microbes just may be the toughest living things on Earth. They have learned to survive, and indeed flourish, in the harshest environment imaginable, deep-sea rifts. These rifts are chains of ... Continue reading

Microbes
Geology

Was That The Big One? Depends On How You Measured It.

The severity of an earthquake can be expressed in terms of both intensity and magnitude. However, the two terms are quite different, and they are often confused. Intensity is based on the observed ... Continue reading

TheBigOne

Seeing In The Dark

SeeingInTheDarkIn the movies, there are all sorts of nasty things that can see perfectly well in the dark. More realistic movies also boast their share of 'beasts' that can see in the dark. Who could forget the eerie sight of FBI trainee Clarice Starling being stalked in the pitch-dark basement of the psychotic killer's torture house? The insecurity and near panic she felt were clearly visible in her face as we looked at her through the killer's eyes, even though her image was little better than that of a pale, green ghost. How could he (and we) see her so well? The answer is in electrons, and in light. Not the usual light that we can see, but light of a slightly lower energy and longer wavelength than the visible range: near-infrared (IR) light. Most materials emit or reflect near-IR light. That is the fact that allows night vision goggles to work, and their value in helping us to see in the dark has been demonstrated time and again.

The principle of 'night vision devices', or NVDs, is simplicity itself: gather the near-IR light as though it were visible light, then do something with it to turn it into a visible signal. That is the tricky part; how do you translate something that is invisible to our eyes into something that our eyes can see? NVDs come in two varieties: passive devices and active devices. Passive devices merely amplify the existing near-IR light. They are often referred to as 'starlight' devices, because starlight has been the usual source of the near-IR light that they process. Active NVDs, on the other hand, incorporate a near-IR light source with which to illuminate the target. In both cases, the photoelectric effect is used to capture and amplify the collected near-IR light. Photons are gathered into an objective lens that focuses them onto a highly polished metal plate, much the same way a camera focuses incoming visible light onto photographic film.

The photoelectric effect then causes electrons to be emitted from the metal plate.These electrons are then accelerated through a potential of several hundred volts to pass into a 'channel plate'. The channel plate contains an array of thousands and thousands of tiny pores (channels), and each channel acts as a 'photomultiplier' tube. The result is that the more IR radiation that goes into the NVD, the brighter the image obtained. Since IR radiation goes hand-in-hand with temperature, adjusting for the wavelength of the IR light allows NVDs to display true thermal images. The user then sees things according to the heat that they give off rather than the light that they reflect. And this - if you are a search-and-rescue worker trying to find a child lost in thick cover, or if you are a soldier walking picket on a starless night in the desert, or if you are just a small boy trying to spot a T-rex from the dubious safety of a stalled electric car - could be a very good thing.