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Reading Smoke Signals
A U.S. Army ranger is on a battlefield in a country known to be
making chemical weapons. Through his binoculars, he spots a cloud of smoke
a mile away. Does it contain lethal gas? At the moment, there is no easy
way to know. But researchers at Sandia National Laboratories and MIT are
working on a dime-sized sensor that could be built into binoculars or
telescopes to spot toxic gases before they do any damage.
The sensor identifies the infrared absorption spectrum of a gas.
When a toxic gas is picked out, the system alerts the user. The
researchers, who include MIT's Steve Senturia and Sandia's Mike Butler and
Mike Sinclair, expect to test an experimental device this fall; they hope
to build a lab prototype within two years. Although the device is being
developed for the military, it carries obvious peacetime uses-fighting
chemical fires being one.
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