MIT Material 10x Blacker Than Any Other: 99.995% Light Absorption

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MIT researchers have developed a material that absorbs 99.995% of incoming light, making it ten times blacker than any previously recorded material. While this implies minimal reflection, it does not mean that no electromagnetic (EM) radiation is re-emitted, particularly in the infrared spectrum. The absorbed energy must be dissipated, and significant thermal wavelengths will only be emitted when the material reaches high temperatures. Kirchhoff's law suggests that the material will emit very little in the visible range. Overall, the claims about light absorption require careful qualification regarding the wavelengths involved.
gmalcolm77
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Summary: MIT researchers have created a material that is 10x blacker than any other material ever recorded. The foil captures at least 99.995% of incoming light.

Does this mean that there is practically no EM re-radiated?
 
Science news on Phys.org
For a certain range of wavelengths: yes !
 
gmalcolm77 said:
The foil captures at least 99.995% of incoming light.

Does this mean that there is practically no EM re-radiated?

those statements need to be qualified.
As @BvU said, "for certain wavelengths, yes"
There's probably still lots of IR being radiated and that is still EM
All that energy being absorbed has to go somewhere
 
davenn said:
those statements need to be qualified.
As @BvU said, "for certain wavelengths, yes"
There's probably still lots of IR being radiated and that is still EM
All that energy being absorbed has to go somewhere
Yea, I figured so, otherwise it's energy would eventually be infinite. The MIT quote I believe is a bit misleading. Thanks.
 
gmalcolm77 said:
Yea, I figured so, otherwise it's energy would eventually be infinite. The MIT quote I believe is a bit misleading. Thanks.
I'm not sure why you aren't responding to my PM requesting that you post a link to a source to help us out, but I did the Google search and here is one such link:

http://news.mit.edu/2019/blackest-black-material-cnt-0913
 
berkeman said:
I'm not sure why you aren't responding to my PM requesting that you post a link to a source to help us out, but I did the Google search and here is one such link:

Haven't figured that out yet. Just a dumb old guy interested in science. Please forgive.
 
No worries. I only had asked in my private message to you that you post a link in your thread so everybody didn't have to go off searching on their own trying to find the original paper so that they could respond well. I did the search now and posted the link, so all is good. :smile:
 
gmalcolm77 said:
Summary: MIT researchers have created a material that is 10x blacker than any other material ever recorded. The foil captures at least 99.995% of incoming light.

Does this mean that there is practically no EM re-radiated?
It really means that practically none is reflected. But it would need to get pretty hot before significant levels of thermal wavelengths would be emitted in the visible range.
 
sophiecentaur said:
It really means that practically none is reflected. But it would need to get pretty hot before significant levels of thermal wavelengths would be emitted in the visible range.
By Kirchhoff's law, it won't emit much in the visible range in any case.
 
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