Optical Futures

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13 posts · 11,580 views

Optical Futures aims to bring together the latest and greatest news on all things optical, whether it be scientific research, new technology or the natural world, demonstrating that solutions involving light truly are the way of the future.

Stuart Watson
13 posts

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  • September 26, 2009
  • 02:52 PM
  • 585 views

Vitamin D and sun bed UV

by Stuart Watson in Optical Futures

Light is good for your health. Most notably, there are significant health benefits from vitamin D, which is produced in our bodies by the absorption into the skin of ultraviolet (UV) radiation. There are also dietary sources of vitamin D, but one of the best and most enjoyable involves simply sitting back and soaking up the sun's rays.



 


 







† Moan, J., Lagunova, Z.,........ Read more »

Moan, J., Lagunova, Z., Cicarma, E., Aksnes, L., Dahlback, A., Grant, W., & Porojnicu, A. (2009) Sunbeds as Vitamin D Sources. Photochemistry and Photobiology. DOI: 10.1111/j.1751-1097.2009.00607.x  

  • September 12, 2009
  • 02:50 AM
  • 648 views

Improved image quality from your camera phone

by Stuart Watson in Optical Futures

The demand for consumer electronics to get smaller, lighter and cheaper, is a stimulus for great ingenuity. Cell phones are a classic example where electrical engineers and designers are constantly working to put a whole lot more into ever smaller spaces. And now that cameras are almost as standard a feature in these devices as the ring tone, optical engineers must also devise increasingly clever ways to shrink the optics while improving their performance.
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Zhou, G., Leung, H., Yu, H., Kumar, A., & Chau, F. (2009) Liquid tunable diffractive/refractive hybrid lens. Optics Letters, 34(18), 2793. DOI: 10.1364/OL.34.002793  

  • September 5, 2009
  • 11:53 AM
  • 634 views

Particle sorting with a miniature light railway

by Stuart Watson in Optical Futures

Lasers which can control the movement of particles are still confined to the microscopic world, but if you have an over-reactive imagination, you might wonder just what the limits are on the size of bodies which these devices can control and whether science fiction's tractor beams are becoming a reality. Today's technology may not be capable of producing force fields that lock on to starships and guide them in to land, but the size of particles which can be manipulated by light are getting large........ Read more »

  • February 28, 2009
  • 05:57 PM
  • 973 views

Laser identification

by Stuart Watson in Optical Futures

Counterfeit and smuggled goods are said to be one of the fuels that drive organised crime, so it is essential that products can be identified to determine if they are genuine and where they came from. Some manufacturers go to extreme lengths to incorporate hard to replicate anti-counterfeit labels or devices into their products, but it's a game of catch up and it isn't long before the criminals find a way of defeating those measures. So how about using no anti-counterfeit measures at all? This i........ Read more »

James D. R. Buchanan, Russell P. Cowburn, Ana-Vanessa Jausovec, Dorothée Petit, Peter Seem, Gang Xiong, Del Atkinson, Kate Fenton, Dan A. Allwood, & Matthew T. Bryan. (2005) Forgery: ‘Fingerprinting’ documents and packaging. Nature, 436(7050), 475-475. DOI: 10.1038/436475a  

  • December 21, 2008
  • 07:35 PM
  • 1,035 views

Miniature temperature sensors take the heat

by Stuart Watson in Optical Futures

Fibre optic sensors really do shine. No, I don't just mean when you pass light down one end and see it come out of the other, I mean they can be made to perform some pretty clever tasks, often triumphing over their electronic rivals. A fibre sensor fabricated by splicing together three different types of optical fibre and capable of measuring temperatures up to 1000°C, has recently been demonstrated by scientists in South Korea†.

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  • December 4, 2008
  • 07:00 PM
  • 1,122 views

Harvesting the sun's energy with lasers

by Stuart Watson in Optical Futures

A novel approach to harvesting the energy of the sun is described in a recent paper in the Journal of Applied Physics, which reports on one of the key components in the system: a solar powered laser1.

 

 

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T. Yabe, B. Bagheri, T. Ohkubo, S. Uchida, K. Yoshida, T. Funatsu, T. Oishi, K. Daito, M. Ishioka, N. Yasunaga.... (2008) 100 W-class solar pumped laser for sustainable magnesium-hydrogen energy cycle. Journal of Applied Physics, 104(8), 83104. DOI: 10.1063/1.2998981  

T. Yabe, S. Uchida, K. Ikuta, K. Yoshida, C. Baasandash, M. S. Mohamed, Y. Sakurai, Y. Ogata, M. Tuji, Y. Mori.... (2006) Demonstrated fossil-fuel-free energy cycle using magnesium and laser. Applied Physics Letters, 89(26), 261107. DOI: 10.1063/1.2423320  

T. Yabe, M. S. Mohamed, S. Uchida, C. Baasandash, Y. Sato, M. Tsuji, & Y. Mori. (2007) Noncatalytic dissociation of MgO by laser pulses towards sustainable energy cycle. Journal of Applied Physics, 101(12), 123106. DOI: 10.1063/1.2743730  

  • November 12, 2008
  • 12:08 AM
  • 1,094 views

Optical spit roast

by Stuart Watson in Optical Futures

Researchers in Germany and the UK have devised a new method for the optical manipulation of microscopic particles and demonstrated it by rotating biological cells under a microscope†.

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Moritz K. Kreysing, Tobias Kieβling, Anatol Fritsch, Christian Dietrich, Jochen R. Guck, & Josef A. Käs. (2008) The optical cell rotator. Optics Express, 16(21), 16984. DOI: 10.1364/OE.16.016984  

  • October 15, 2008
  • 07:55 PM
  • 1,046 views

Particle clearance with Airy light beams

by Stuart Watson in Optical Futures

It has been likened to an optically driven snowblower for microscopic particles and could see practical use for the sorting of micrometre sized particles. Researchers from the University of Saint Andrews in the UK have reported on their work using Airy beams for particle clearing, in an advance online publication for Nature Photonics†.

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  • July 7, 2008
  • 01:07 PM
  • 892 views

Fibre sensor operates at extreme temperatures

by Stuart Watson in Optical Futures

Optical fibres can be used in a variety of ways to perform remote sensing operations. Take the case of the Fibre Fabry-Pérot (FFP) interferometer, for example. Working on the principle of light interference produced by two parallel reflecting surfaces either side of a small cavity, they can be constructed in different ways, either with an external cavity, or with the cavity located within the body of the fibre itself. They can be used to measure pressure, temperature or strain, all by det........ Read more »

  • June 26, 2008
  • 06:30 PM
  • 880 views

Photo-acoustics to detect explosives

by Stuart Watson in Optical Futures

After having just reported on a new and novel use of the photo-acoustic effect for use in the printing industry (Photo-acoustics measure ink thickness), here's another story that's (cliché alert!) hot of the press: Researchers at Oak Ridge National Laboratory and the University of Tennessee have used

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C Van Neste, L R Senesac, & T Thundat. (2008) Standoff photoacoustic spectroscopy. Applied Physics Letters, 92(23), 234102. DOI: 10.1063/1.2945288  

  • June 21, 2008
  • 03:53 PM
  • 941 views

Photo-acoustics measure ink thickness

by Stuart Watson in Optical Futures

In an effort to add a little variety and step away from all the new biomedical applications out there that exploit the endless wonder of light, here's a paper describing the use of light to make measurements of ink thickness! Okay, that might seem a little mundane, but it’s a classic example of the way in which light is used to solve an everyday problem, in this case to measure the thickness of black ink, typically a few microns or so, whilst it is spinning on the roller of a printing........ Read more »

  • June 16, 2008
  • 11:04 AM
  • 868 views

Targeted closure of blood vessels

by Stuart Watson in Optical Futures

One treatment for abnormal tissue growths, including cancerous tumours, is to close off the vessels supplying blood to that region, thereby killing it off. In some parts of the body, such as the eye and the brain, this requires an extraordinary level of precision. Researchers in the UK, Canada and the US, have recently produced a photo-activated drug and demonstrated that it is able to achieve far greater precision than any existing techniques, without causing damage beyond the treated region1......... Read more »

Hazel Collins, Mamta Khurana, Eduardo H Moriyama, Adrian Mariampillai, Emma Dahlstedt, Milan Balaz, Marina K Kuimova, Mikhail Drobizhev, Victor X Yang, David Phillips.... (2008) Blood-vessel closure using photosensitizers engineered for two-photon excitation. Nature Photonics. DOI: 10.1038/nphoton.2008.100  

  • June 6, 2008
  • 05:56 PM
  • 862 views

Microscopic particle manipulation for screening operations

by Stuart Watson in Optical Futures

Controlling the movement of microscopic particles is tough; controlling the movement of thousands of tiny particles is a challenge indeed. Chemical and biological screening are two applications that would benefit from a technique which involves the manipulation of large numbers of droplets contained in a small quantity of fluid, and researchers in the US and Austria have recently demonstrated that they can steer those tiny droplets within an electrically insulating fluid using light1.

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