Regular Light Bulbs Made Super-Efficient with Ultra-Fast Laser
(PhysOrg.com) – An ultra-powerful laser can turn regular incandescent light bulbs into power-sippers, say optics researchers at the University of Rochester. The process could make a light as bright as a 100-watt bulb consume less electricity than a 60-watt bulb while remaining far cheaper and radiating a more pleasant light than a fluorescent bulb can.
The laser process creates a unique array of nano- and micro-scale structures on the surface of a regular tungsten filament—the tiny wire inside a light bulb—and theses structures make the tungsten become far more effective at radiating light.
No comments yet.
Leave a Reply
-
Recent
- Samsung bezel-less Android phone a possibility
- Stochastic Pattern Recognition Dramatically Outperforms Conventional Techniques
- UFO Scout Ship Lands In New Mexico?
- Sram Red – 925 LEI
- Trinity to boost performance, save power with resonant clock mesh
- Sandisk touts “world’s smallest” 128Gb NAND flash memory chip
- ‘Fountain of youth’ enzyme lengthens mouse life
- Kakapo: The parrot that can’t fly and only wants sex every two years
- How the Dutch got their cycle paths
- Diet pill aims for US regulatory approval
- Bugathermo™ Original Electric – 1399 RON
- Amazon Kindle with color e-ink in the works [Rumor]
-
Links
-
Archives
- February 2012 (80)
- January 2012 (99)
- December 2011 (118)
- November 2011 (149)
- October 2011 (161)
- September 2011 (164)
- August 2011 (120)
- July 2011 (163)
- June 2011 (121)
- May 2011 (98)
- April 2011 (99)
- March 2011 (197)
-
Categories
-
RSS
Entries RSS
Comments RSS