Scientists from UCLA have found an unexpected—not to mention cheap—way to produce x-rays: Scotch Tape.
Just two weeks after a Nobel Prize highlighted theoretical work on subatomic particles, physicists are announcing a startling discovery about a much more familiar form of matter: Scotch tape. It turns out that if you peel the popular adhesive tape off its roll in a vacuum chamber, it emits X-rays. The researchers even made an X-ray image of one of their fingers. . . .
“We were very surprised,” said Juan Escobar. “The power you could get from just peeling tape was enormous.” . . .
He suggests that with some refinements, the process might be harnessed for making inexpensive X-ray machines for paramedics or for places where electricity is expensive or hard to get. After all, you could peel tape or do something similar in such machines with just human power, like cranking.


Masthead
Ian Marcus Corbin
Meghan Duke
Greg Forster
Matthew J. Franck
Joseph Lawler
Micah Mattix
Robert T. Miller
Matthew Milliner
David Mills
Joseph Knippenberg
R.R. Reno
Robert Saler
Russell E. Saltzman
Matthew Schmitz
Archive
Monthly