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posted by janrinok on Thursday March 20 2014, @02:52PM   Printer-friendly
from the a-not-so-cool-view dept.

calmond writes:

"Researchers from the University of Michigan have created a super-thin light detector that can pick up the entire infrared spectrum in addition to visible and ultraviolet light. The heat vision technology is made of graphene, which is considered to be the world's strongest material, and is small enough to fit on a contact lens.

Its developers say the technology could one day give people super-human vision and is particularly relevant for use by the military. Other, non-military uses, such as checking power distribution cables or search-and-rescue tasks are also possible.

A news release from the University team is to be found here, while a technical abstract is here. Unfortunately, the full technical paper is only viewable by payment or membership.

 
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  • (Score: 1, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 20 2014, @06:21PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 20 2014, @06:21PM (#18997)

    A quick google yielded this:

    "Between 3-30 hertz (flashes per second) are the common rates to trigger seizures"

    Infrared remotes have a carrier of ~38KHz and the signal is then pulsed on and off at intervals of ~1-3ms to encode the commands on the carrier:
    http://learn.adafruit.com/ir-sensor/ir-remote-sign als [adafruit.com]

    IR remotes don't seem to be a plausible source for epileptic seizures given those facts.

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