Friday, January 26, 2007

Texas leads in nanotech armor

Betterhumans ("forward thinkers discussing, celebrating and creating the future") reports that another Texas researcher is a leader in biotech.

University of Texas' nanotechnologist Ray Baughman has learned to spin a new yarn from carbon nanotubules. It appears that the yarn contracts when stimulated with electricity and is expected to be strong enough to serve as armor. he has a contract with the Pentagon to produce "exoskeletons" for soldiers. More from Spiegal Online International.

2 comments:

Suricou Raven said...

Contract when stimulated with electricity? And return to its origional shape?

Let the military pay to develop this, but I see much potential for artificial limbs. If someone works out a safe and reliable way to interface nerve to cable, this could be almost as good as the real thing. Stronger, but less sensetive.

LifeEthics.org said...

Cool, isn't it?