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🗓️ 6 January 2015
⏱️ 1 minutes
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0:00.0 | This is a scientific Americans 60 second science. I'm Karen Hopkins. This will just take a minute. |
0:08.0 | Sometimes it's hard to see the light, especially if it lies outside the visible spectrum, like x-rays or ultraviolet radiation. |
0:15.2 | But if you long to see the unseeable, you might be interested to hear that under certain conditions |
0:19.7 | people can catch a glimpse of usually invisible infrared light, that's according to a study in the |
0:24.1 | proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. |
0:27.2 | Our eyes are sensitive to elementary particles called photons that have sufficient energy |
0:31.5 | to excite light sensitive receptor proteins in our retinas. |
0:35.0 | The photons in infrared radiation on the other hand have less oomph. |
0:39.0 | We can detect those lower energy photons using what are sometimes called night vision cameras or goggles, but the naked |
0:45.2 | eye is usually blind to infrared radiation. But recently, researchers in a laser lab noticed that |
0:50.8 | they sometimes saw flashes of light while working with |
0:53.4 | devices that emitted brief infrared pulses. So they filled a test tube with |
0:57.9 | retinal cells and zapped it with their lasers. When the light pulses |
1:01.6 | rapidly enough, the receptors can get hit with two photons at the same time, |
1:05.0 | which supplies enough energy to excite the receptor. |
1:08.0 | That double dose makes the infrared visible. |
1:11.0 | One application of the finding is that it could give doctors a new tool |
1:14.1 | to diagnose diseases of the retina, so they could eyeball trouble before it might otherwise |
1:18.4 | be seen. Thanks for the minute. For Scientific Americans 60 Second Science I'm Karen Hopkins. |
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