NASA Goddard Space Flight Center scientists have created a new
material that is ten times blacker than the blackest black paint in the
world. It's made of carbon nanotubes grown on titanium. Why does NASA
need this material?
Once it goes through some manufacturing fine-tuning, the new material
will be used to coat the guts of cameras and telescopes in space. Right
now, these instruments use NASA's Z306 paint, a pitch black painting
that reduces photon contamination by absorbing errant light. According
to NASA, this light "has a funny way of ricocheting off instrument
components and contaminating measurements."
But Z306 is not black enough: 40% of the data captured by space
cameras is unusable because of light contamination. With the new blacker
than black coating, this is what will happen:
The new material absorbs 99.5 of the light in the tiny gaps between the
tubes, practically eliminating the problem. The material is close to
final production, and NASA is looking into using it in ORCA, "the Ocean
Radiometer for Carbon Assessment, a next-generation instrument that is
designed to measure marine photosynthesis." [NASA]
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