Scientists from North Carolina State University successfully “squeezed” infrared light to 10 percent of ... on technology that can glimpse these “invisible” wavelengths.
Astronomers have detected oxygen in the most distant galaxy ever found. It’s 13.4 billion light-years away from Earth, according to new research.
they convert the infrared light into an electrical signal. This signal allows the sensors to detect and measure the presence of an object from its surrounding environment, even those invisible to the ...
With today's data rates of only a few hundred megabytes per second, access to digital information remains relatively slow.
Detecting microplastics and identifying plant stress at an early stage -- this and much more can now be done thanks to a new method based on near-infrared light measurements. It is inexpensive and ...
and also shorter-wavelength ultraviolet and longer-wavelength infrared light, invisible to the eye but detectable by certain telescopes on Earth and in space—and by the still longer waves of ...
Light is electromagnetic energy measured in nanometers. The human eye can see wavelengths between 380 nm, beginning at violet and bordering on ultraviolet, and 700 nm, which is red and bordering on ...
This computer then commands the glasses to send data to the implant via invisible infrared light. The chip converts the light to electrical impulses and conducts them to the optic nerve.