Skip to content
Personal Growth

Super-Black Material Aborbs 99% of Light

N.A.S.A. has produced a material that absorbs over 99 percent of the ultraviolet, visible, infrared, and far-infrared light—a development that promises to open new frontiers in space technology.

What’s the Latest Development?


N.A.S.A. engineers have developed a material that absorbs more than 99 percent of the light that hits it, including ultraviolet, infrared and far-infrared spectra. The material is a coating made of a thin layer of multi-walled carbon nanotubes, tiny hollow tubes made of pure carbon about 10,000 times thinner than a strand of human hair. The material will be useful for a variety of spaceflight applications where observing in multiple wavelength bands is important to scientific discovery.

What’s the Big Idea?

The new material could be a boon for astronomers who depend on faint light to make important discoveries. “If used in detectors and other instrument components, this new technology would allow scientists to gather hard-to-obtain measurements of objects so distant in the universe that astronomers no longer can see them in visible light or those in high-contrast areas, including planets in orbit around other stars,” said John Hagopian, leader of the N.A.S.A. team responsible for the find.

Photo credit: Shutterstock.com


Related
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Nullam id tincidunt mi. Morbi malesuada nulla sit amet est hendrerit tincidunt. Etiam viverra, nisl id volutpat eleifend, est augue sodales orci, […]

Up Next