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Robert
Would be very nice for emergency vehicals, also.
December 29th, 2007 at 1:59 am
Why yes, I would love a jacket that glows in the dark because it is full of radioactive gas. That sounds great… And they thought that lead was bad in paint. Soon China will be returning toys to the US because we painted them with glow in the dark radiation…)))
Just so you know, that monitor your using to type stuff like that is beaming radiation in to your head along with countless other household items.
I'm quite interested in how it works but we shouldn't assume that science has lept back to 1950's America where watch hands were painted with the stuff. Also LCD screens don't emit radiation.
What’s wrong with a bit of darkness?">
hear hear !!
Can this be added to the paint used in the "yellow lines" on highways??
Maybe paint a few guard-rails too.
Make the highway systems look like Tron!
All joking aside. This technology has the possibility of saving many lives. Buy your stock in this company early.
What's really "amazing" is a skill called "critical thinking." Think. Read.
Homeland Stupidity already limits TRitum into the Country for fear of contamination \ dirty bombs etc.. how is this different?
What is the active ingredient?
Anyone?
I just read the patent app...
2. A self-luminous microsphere as set forth in claim 1, wherein the gas is tritium.
Good luck selling it in the states or buying it. I'll bet consumers never see the stuff.
http://www.glopaint.com/24orders.htm
Tiny glass balls filled with a stuff that glows when hit by electrons, and gas that spews out electrons.
The electrons cannot penetrate the gas balls, so it's safe.
The glass balls are so small that if damaged, the escaping gas is negligable.
And yes it is using radiation - beta - which is not considered dangerous (how this paint works is conceptually the same as how a CRT monitor works).
There is nothing whatsoever on the website that details anything about how this magical material actually functions or from where it obtains its absurdly abundant energy.
The "award" they got from NASA was basically for having the coolest-sounding idea... they are not required to explain how it works or actually demonstrate that they have created anything.
Believe it when there's something in the store you can pay money for. Right now it's just snake-oil, and you're a sucker for buying into it.
"The low-energy beta radiation from tritium cannot penetrate human skin, so tritium is only dangerous if inhaled or ingested."
Sounds as safe as lead paint.
The tritium used is encased in small glass beads so that both the gas and the beta radiation cannot leak, and is stored in these beads to minimize spillage if they rupture.
Even if it leaks, the low-energy beta radiation from tritium cannot penetrate human skin, so tritium is only dangerous if inhaled or ingested.
@Lenny: This is not yet for sale, all of the products on that page only glow for a few hours, and must be "charged" in another light source.
It's banned from export, not import.
Radioluminescent tech got a bad rep because early versions used Radium which is a very strongly chemically reactive alpha & gamma emitter that decays into an Radon gas which is also an alpha emitter that you can inhale. Alpha particles can cause nuclear transmutation, which is very strong carcinogen.
What most people don't realize is that both coal and oil contain radioactive elements that are released in significant amounts when they are burned in volume. By contrast, beta radioluminescent tech produces less radiation and of a much safer type. Don't be scared by the word 'radiation' - even visible light is a type of radiation.
Glowing plastic trash. Maybe we'll finally see the Pacific Gyre from space!
Would be nice to know how these will decompose and how long until it is in the food chain.
Can't wait to glow in the dark too.
Odd link to glowpaint because "glow paint" requires light, THEN glows a while. Read this about LITROENERGY:
"without any exposure to light"
Whereas GLOWPAINT says:
"Each time the item you have painted is exposed to light for 15 minutes the item will glow in the dark."
"Litrospheres (non-toxic) emit light continuously for 12 plus years (half-life point) without any exposure to a light or other energy (not effected by cold or heat)."
http://www.createthefuturecontest.com/pages/vie...
Well, certainly, they could advertise it is 100% natural too. Wonder what the inventors def of "non toxic" is??
What do we really need this stuff for? I could see a glowing string bikini on an exotic dancer under black light doing her thing, maybe. When was the last time anyone really used a "glow stick" rather than a flashligt to illuminate something? Don't reflectors work well enough in presence of car headlights?
Wow, soon we will not have any dark left and be constantly bombarded by glowing everything so we are "safer" during the evil night. This sounds a lot like that gyroscopic unicycle thing that was supposed to revolutionize the world. Ride a bike, get a flashlight. I've got an LED one with a crank. I'm sure it is good for 25 years or so since the actual time it's ever been utilized is so limited. I've got 25 year old flashlights that still work too! Probably better to invent a better battery for those old flashlights that still work.
I'd LOVE to put some of those on the walls of my room! :)
Sounds like a great idea to me!
I wish them luck marketing it to the same clowns who hold up grocery store lines making the clerks manually enter every item because they don't want their purchases 'contaminated by laser radiation.'
Not a bad thing, but nothing revolutionary.
Good lord.
(i havent tried it, just trying to help the site out) ROFLMAO