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chancy
25th April 2016, 04:21
Hello Everyone:
This is a great accomplishment if you need something that is as black as can be made! It will make the Hubble Telescope work much better by letting no stray light into the telescope for a sharper and clearer photograph.
chancy

Link
http://uk.businessinsider.com/vantablack-vs-hubble-telescope-black-paint-2016-4?ref=yfp

Article:
The world's blackest material makes NASA's ultra-black paint look like it’s not even black
Rebecca Harrington, Tech Insider
Apr. 21, 2016, 1:37 PM 1,688

vantablack Surrey NanosystemsVantablack.
The paint used on the Hubble telescope is one of the blackest materials in space. It's there to reduce stray light so the instrument can photograph the best possible images of our solar system and beyond.

But researchers from British company Surrey NanoSystems have made something much, much blacker.

Their material, awesomely called Vantablack, is so black that they can't even measure how dark it is.

They've posted a YouTube video comparing their creation to the Hubble paint, called Aeroglaze Z306.

Vantablack makes Aeroglaze look like it's not even black. When the researchers shine a light on the two, you can see the Hubble paint reflecting light back, but not Vantablack:

The same thing happens when they shine a red laser on the two materials:

Vantablack absorbs almost all of the light, reflecting nothing detectable back to our eyes. It's made by tightly packing carbon nanotubes — rods of carbon that are much, much thinner than any human hair — so close together that light goes in, but can't escape.

Surrey NanoSystems has tested Vantablack to see if it could withstand going into space, so maybe the material could replace Aeroglaze on the next space telescope.

They've also turned Vantablack into a spray paint that captures 99.8% of light (slightly lower than Vantablack's 99.965%). You can't find it on store shelves, though: The spray paint is currently only available through the company's processing center in the UK.

Watch the full video of the Aeroglaze vs. Vantablack comparison:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-RRqj1FORl8

Heyoka_11
25th April 2016, 10:03
Wow! That stuff is truly amazing, and thanks chancy for posting the info.

Got to wonder how many nefarious uses will be dreamed up, Just give it time.

betoobig
25th April 2016, 11:01
A room painted with that paint will look like it ha no end, it will be perfect to simulate the universe. As usual its use will depend in who's hands this is in.
Much love

Carmody
25th April 2016, 12:19
This material would be fragile. Ie, damaged by use in a room with normal air. The dirt in the air would ruin it and it's qualities can't survive being physically handled.

So, in effect, it is very very nice, but it is meant for exceedingly clean environments, clean rooms, in fact, or it will diminish in quality fairly rapidly, at a pace that is associated with it's exposure to dirt, grease, and so on. It cannot be cleaned. It requires re-application to regain it's qualities. It has no wearability.

I have not handled or seen the product, but it's constructional details and the nature of reality all together, state that this product is inherently fragile.

TargeT
25th April 2016, 16:05
It seems fairly resilient,
It doesn't tolerate abrasion very well though... There is a company that will paint objects for you with this, I posted something about it in my tech thread a while back.

Aurelius
26th April 2016, 01:07
the blackness is due to light being magnetically trapped between the nano layers (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JL64BQeEjEo), hence it can't be reflected back ....

TargeT
26th April 2016, 01:13
the blackness it due the the magnetic trap between nano layers (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JL64BQeEjEo)....

No, it's more like the blackness is similar to what deep forests have, the light isn't reflected and goes down many "dead end paths" (many times many, because this is a nano tube coated material).


The darkest material on Earth has become even darker
There is none more black than the new Vantablack.[/B]
http://o.aolcdn.com/hss/storage/midas/a50e93f8948f269cfd112ee165dac0f5/203504036/vantablack2.gif
I want a full body suit made out of this... it would be fun to be a shadow.

any level of magnetism that the carbon tubes hold (little to none, mostly none) would be insignificant when compared to the photonic power of a laser.