View Full Version : New material pushes the boundary of blackness


Michael Wisniewski
January 20th, 2008, 05:45 PM
Darkest material on Earth (http://www.reuters.com/article/scienceNews/idUSN1555030620080115?sp=true) - It sounds like something invented in a comic book, but apparently it's for real. I'm half-expecting Lex Luthor to show up and steal it.

CHICAGO (Reuters) - U.S. researchers said on Tuesday they have made the darkest material on Earth, a substance so black it absorbs more than 99.9 percent of light.

Mike Brown
January 20th, 2008, 05:58 PM
Michael, you reckon them carbon nanotubes are what Pioneer's using in their super-black display exhibited at the Consumer Electronics Show? This heavy-breathing article described it as "unquestionably the greatest television anyone has ever built. Period."

Contrast ratio kills (http://www.tech.co.uk/home-entertainment/tv/tvs-displays/plasma/news/this-is-the-best-television-in-the-world?articleid=230507738)

Mark Kenfield
January 21st, 2008, 08:28 PM
Michael, you reckon them carbon nanotubes are what Pioneer's using in their super-black display exhibited at the Consumer Electronics Show? This heavy-breathing article described it as "unquestionably the greatest television anyone has ever built. Period."

Contrast ratio kills (http://www.tech.co.uk/home-entertainment/tv/tvs-displays/plasma/news/this-is-the-best-television-in-the-world?articleid=230507738)

Exciting stuff though, if this sort of technology can work its way into computer monitors it could be very handy for multi-media work.

Greg Boston
January 22nd, 2008, 12:08 AM
Michael, you reckon them carbon nanotubes are what Pioneer's using in their super-black display exhibited at the Consumer Electronics Show? This heavy-breathing article described it as "unquestionably the greatest television anyone has ever built. Period."

Contrast ratio kills (http://www.tech.co.uk/home-entertainment/tv/tvs-displays/plasma/news/this-is-the-best-television-in-the-world?articleid=230507738)

Funny you should mention carbon nanotubes. I was watching, "Modern Marvels" the other evening and it was an episode dedicated to carbon. The carbon nanotube thing came up at the end of the show.

Amazing stuff, even to a guy like me who spent 25 years in the semiconductor industry.

-gb-