(I saw quite a bit of articles in various newspapers but many I saw were a little sloppy or not informative enough)
This article about Kibble balance and related background is good.
SI gets a makeover

N Narinder Singh Kapany ' Discovery of Fiber Optics in 1953 ..
The first is a package of Franco-British seismometers that will be lifted on to the surface to listen for "Marsquakes". These vibrations will reveal where the rock layers are and what they are made of.
A German-led "mole" system will burrow up to 5m into the ground to take the planet's temperature. This will give a sense of how active Mars still is.
And the third experiment will use radio transmissions to very precisely determine how the planet is wobbling on its axis. Deputy project scientist Suzanne Smrekar uses this analogy: "If you take a raw egg and a cooked egg and you spin them, they wobble differently because of the distribution of liquid in the interior. And today we really don't know if the core of Mars is liquid or solid, and how big that core is. InSight will give us this information."
SriKumar wrote:Is the infrared material as good as claimed? Virtually undetectable by an IR camera is a difficult thing.....
I did not google this but am curious as to whether this material has a low thermal conductivity, or high specific heat (or both). In effect they have made a good thermal insulator? Heat 'absorbing' suggests it absorbs the heat and does not dissipate. So it is like agoodlarge heat sink, but without the accompanying physical mass?
Amber G. wrote:From a physics professor, but this has a great implication to India. Congratulations.Researchers from IIT Kanpur have developed cutting-edge metamaterials that will be of great importance in developing our country’s defence capabilities. Profs. Anantha Ramakrishnan, Department of Physics; J Ramkumar, Department of Mechanical Engineering and Kumar Vaibhav Srivastava, Department of Electrical Engineering have developed transparent RADAR absorbent material, the first in the world to cover all RADAR frequencies as well as textile-based material, non-detectable by RADAR, which can be used in uniforms for soldiers as well as skirtings for war machines.
They have also developed India’s first infrared absorbent metamaterial, meant to prevent hot objects from emitting infrared radiation, making them virtually undetectable at night. These will be crucial for keeping our defence systems and soldiers safe from attacks at night.[/quote
Mort Walker wrote:
This RAM would have to cover the wavelengths of L band to X band, which is 1 GHz - 10 GHz or 30 cm to 2.5 cm. I would have to read up on this as it is very wide range.
souravB wrote:Mort Walker wrote:
This RAM would have to cover the wavelengths of L band to X band, which is 1 GHz - 10 GHz or 30 cm to 2.5 cm. I would have to read up on this as it is very wide range.
A type of UWB radar absorbing structure is rumored to be used on F35. According to the patent it is a CNT infused composite structure.
DRDO is also working on it as far as I can tell from some bits of research I find in open source but the feasibility is any body's guess.
One of the DRDO research on UWB RAS
Amber G. wrote:Meanwhile .. Wow! but this is going to be routine in coming times.. Waiting for LIGO India (a few years) to join..Physicists Spot Four Black Hole Collisions, Including the Largest One Ever Recorded
(So this brings up to total number of GW detection to 11!!)
LIGO and Virgo Announce Four New Gravitational-Wave Detections
News Release • December 3, 2018
The observatories are also releasing their first catalog of gravitational-wave events
The National Science Foundation's LIGO (Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory) and the European-based VIRGO gravitational-wave detector have published new results from the first two Observing runs. Four new black hole mergers are newly announced, The LIGO and Virgo collaborations have now confidently detected gravitational waves from a total of 10 stellar-mass binary black hole mergers and one merger of neutron stars, which are the dense, spherical remains of stellar explosions.
Press release
O1-O2 catalog at https://arxiv.org/abs/1811.12907
O1-O2 data download <link>
Amber G. wrote:From a physics professor, but this has a great implication to India. Congratulations.Researchers from IIT Kanpur have developed cutting-edge metamaterials that will be of great importance in developing our country’s defence capabilities. Profs. Anantha Ramakrishnan, Department of Physics; J Ramkumar, Department of Mechanical Engineering and Kumar Vaibhav Srivastava, Department of Electrical Engineering have developed transparent RADAR absorbent material, the first in the world to cover all RADAR frequencies as well as textile-based material, non-detectable by RADAR, which can be used in uniforms for soldiers as well as skirtings for war machines.
They have also developed India’s first infrared absorbent metamaterial, meant to prevent hot objects from emitting infrared radiation, making them virtually undetectable at night. These will be crucial for keeping our defence systems and soldiers safe from attacks at night.
Scientists said the material can be used as uniforms for personnel and skirting or covering ground vehicles to avoid their detection by the enemy’s advanced battlefield radars, motion-detecting ground sensors and thermal imaging systems.
INDIA Updated: Dec 04, 2018 13:10 IST
Scientists at the Indian Institute of Technology-Kanpur (IIT-K) said on Monday they have developed textile-based metamaterials that can help defence personnel and vehicles avoid being detected by enemy radars.
The project was supported by the Defence Research Development Organisation, the department of science and technology, and IIT-K. It was carried out by Kumar Vaibhav Srivastava of the electrical engineering department and J Ramkumar of the mechanical engineering department of the institute.
They said the material can be used as uniforms for personnel and skirting or covering ground vehicles to avoid their detection by the enemy’s advanced battlefield radars, motion-detecting ground sensors and thermal imaging systems. The material is flexible and can be customised for different climates, they added.
“In a major achievement, we have designed and produced micro-structured infra-red metamaterials with processes that can be readily scaled for mass production to cover large area surfaces. These infra-red metamaterials are applied on any given surface to reduce the thermal emission to create infra-red stealth,” professor S Anantha Ramakrishna of the department of physics at IIT-K said.
Transparent meta-material absorbers have also been developed for vehicular windshields or a canopy of slow aircraft like helicopters.
“We are also in the process of developing robust meta-materials for radar stealth which can be applied on high-speed aircraft and switchable meta-materials for active camouflage applications,” Ramakrishna said.
He said at the beginning of the 21st century, new composite micro-structured materials called meta-materials were found to have very unexpected properties due to their specific structure that caused resonant interactions with electromagnetic waves.
Ramakrishna said they began working on defence applications of metamaterials, which will reduce radar detection in most radar bands, around 2010.
“Stealth fighter aircraft were already in use but they used very different concepts and heavy ceramic ferrites for achieving stealth. Meta-material based absorbers held the promise of lightweight, ultra-thin and flexible materials that could be applied literally on any surface to give the required properties at radar frequencies, infra-red frequencies or even optical frequencies,” he said.
The professor said they have also been able to realise metamaterials for infra-red light that will enable forces to completely control the emission of infra-red light from surfaces, which can be used for infra-red stealth.
“Laboratory level development of demonstrations has been completed and now we are proceeding for field testing,” he said.
Amber G. wrote:This looks like a BIG really BIG item...and indications are that this is real.
The news just got a big credibility boost -- There is a paper, accepted in prestigious Physical Review Letters and hence this is may be a potential record-breaking superconductor.
Expect major headlines in coming days..It is already in some popular magazines.
A new hydrogen-rich compound may be a record-breaking superconductor
New record is about -13 degrees Centigrade (some times outside temperature here).!! Previous best records were about -70 degrees centigrade.
This is going to change lot of things.
JayS wrote:Amber G. wrote:
I first came to know about superconductivity in 11th Standard. I immediately got convinced that advent of superconductors working at room temperatures under normal conditions would be a paradigm changing technology. It would seat with the likes of Fire, wheel, iron, semi cpnductprs and so on. I hope I see it coming true in my life time.
Amber G. wrote:Some may be interested (share if you know some one who may be)
LIGO-IndIGO is going to run a Summer Students Program: 10-week research program. It is in summer 2019 and one can apply till Fen 2019. The program encourages undergraduate students (Mostly from good Indian Colleges) to participate in the development of gravitational-wave astronomy.
The details here: http://gw-indigo.org/tiki-read_article.php?articleId=108&fbclid=IwAR0jbsqZzpBlzj1jsDeUDzcL81vzF9U3rxEhviscIpZ1PPeSxib1zt6KLgA
Amber G. wrote:Waited for this update for a long time.
After a successful final round of meetings with the State Environmental Impact Assessment Authority on Jan 8th.
LIGOIndia formally transits into the construction phase. Team celebrations on Jan 17th at Khandala.
(Some information here: http://www.gw.iucaa.in/limma2019/)
ArjunPandit wrote:^^it may still
1. enable researchers without going abroad. Complement the astrosat
2. inspire kids to take up the research and hard sciences rather than the engineering, which anyways is saturating. Some would definitely pursue this as their "passion"
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