Tag Archives: laser

NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Fired a Laser at a Spacecraft on the Moon. Here’s the Reason Why. – The Debrief

  1. NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Fired a Laser at a Spacecraft on the Moon. Here’s the Reason Why. The Debrief
  2. NASA Spacecraft’s Retroreflector ‘Pinged’ Chandrayaan-3’s Vikram Lander On the Moon | Weather.com The Weather Channel
  3. Chandrayaan-3 mission: NASA’s LRO ‘pings’ Vikram Lander with laser instrument | Oneindia News Oneindia News
  4. NASA Spacecraft ‘Pings’ India’s Chandrayaan-3 Lander On Moon, Know Significance Jagran Josh
  5. ISRO’s Chandrayaan-3 Comes Back To Life; Watch How It Will Guide Astronauts Landing On Moon Hindustan Times

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Samsung’s 120-inch smart 4K laser projector is $700 off right now – Digital Trends

  1. Samsung’s 120-inch smart 4K laser projector is $700 off right now Digital Trends
  2. My favourite projector deal from last Prime Day is back, and I’m betting it won’t be beaten once again What Hi-Fi?
  3. One of the Best 4K Projectors for Upgrading Your Home Theater Is $900 Off for Amazon Fall Prime Day Hollywood Reporter
  4. Amazon shoppers rush to buy ‘cracking’ £250 projector scanning for £130 in Prime Day sale… The Sun
  5. Hurry! The award-winning Hisense PL1 projector’s price has been slashed, but not on Amazon What Hi-Fi?
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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NBA probed incident involving associates of Grizzlies’ Ja Morant; red laser trained on Pacers team members – The Athletic

  1. NBA probed incident involving associates of Grizzlies’ Ja Morant; red laser trained on Pacers team members The Athletic
  2. Ja Morant’s friends allegedly threatened, trained a red laser on Pacers staff with Morant present after game Yahoo Sports
  3. Ja Morant’s entourage involved in postgame altercation with Pacers; red laser shined at team, per report CBS Sports
  4. Report: Members of Pacers’ travel party threatened by Ja Morant associates in Memphis IndyStar
  5. Drew Hill: Ja Morant on potentially playing Jaren Jackson Jr. in the ASG: “I’m definitely settin… Hoops Hype
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Physicists Break Record Firing a Laser Down Their University Corridor : ScienceAlert

Physicists have just set a new record confining a self-focused laser pulse to a cage of air, down the length of a 45 meter-long (148 foot-long) university corridor.

With previous results falling well short of a meter, this newest experiment led by physicist Howard Milchberg of the University of Maryland (UMD) breaks new ground for confining light to channels known as air waveguides.

A paper describing the research has been accepted into the journal Physical Review X, and can in the meantime be found on the preprint server arXiv . The results could inspire new ways to achieve long-range laser-based communications or even advanced laser-based weapons technology.

“If we had a longer hallway, our results show that we could have adjusted the laser for a longer waveguide,” says UMD physicist Andrew Tartaro.

“But we got our guide right for the hallway we have.”

Lasers can be useful for a range of applications, but the coherent rays of neatly-arranged light need to be corralled and focused in some way. Left to its own devices, a laser will scatter, losing power and effectiveness.

One such focusing technique is the waveguide, and it’s exactly what it sounds like: it guides electromagnetic waves down a specific path, preventing them from scattering.

Optical fiber is one example. This consists of a glass tube along which electromagnetic waves are directed. Because the cladding around the outside of the tube has a lower refractive index than the center of the tube, light that tries to scatter instead bends back into the tube, maintaining the beam along its length.

In 2014, Milchberg and his colleagues successfully demonstrated what they called an air waveguide. Rather than using a physical construct such as a tube, they used laser pulses to corral their laser light. They found that pulsed laser creates a plasma that heats the air in its wake, leaving behind a path of lower-density air. It’s like lightning and thunder in miniature: the expanding lower-density air creates a sound like a tiny thunderclap following the laser, creating what’s known as a filament.

The lower density air has a lower refractive index than the air around it – like the cladding around an optical fiber tube. So firing these filaments in a specific configuration that “cages” a laser beam in their center effectively creates a waveguide out of the air.

The initial experiments described in 2014 created an air waveguide of about 70 centimeters (2.3 feet) long, using four filaments. To scale the experiment up, they needed more filaments – and a much longer tunnel down which to shine their lights, preferably without having to move their heavy equipment. Hence, a long corridor at UMD’s Energy Research Facility, altered to allow the safe propagation of lasers beamed through a hole in the lab wall.

Corridor entry points were blocked, shiny surfaces covered, laser-absorbing curtains deployed.

“It was a really unique experience,” says UMD electrical engineer Andrew Goffin, the first author on the team’s paper.

“There’s a lot of work that goes into shooting lasers outside the lab that you don’t have to deal with when you’re in the lab – like putting up curtains for eye safety. It was definitely tiring.”

The light collected after its hallway journey without (left) and with (right) an air waveguide. (Intense Laser-Matter Interactions Lab, UMD)

Finally, the team was able to create a waveguide capable of traversing a 45 meter corridor – accompanied by crackling, popping noises, the tiny thunderclaps created by their laser filament “lightning”. At the end of the air waveguide, the laser pulse in the center had retained about 20 percent of the light that would have been otherwise lost without a waveguide.

Back in the lab, the team also studied a shorter, 8-meter air waveguide, to take measurements of the processes that occurred in the hallway, where they didn’t have the equipment to do so. These shorter tests were able to retain 60 percent of the light that would have been lost. The tiny thunderclaps were also useful: the more energetic the waveguide, the louder the pop.

Their experiments revealed that the waveguide is extremely fleeting, lasting just hundredths of a second. To guide something that’s traveling the speed of light, however, that time is ample.

The research suggests where improvements can be made; for example, higher guiding efficiency and length should result in even less light lost. The team also wants to try different colors of laser light, and a faster filament pulse rate, to see if they can guide a continuous laser beam.

“Reaching the 50-meter scale for air waveguides literally blazes the path for even longer waveguides and many applications,” Milchberg says.

“Based on new lasers we are soon to get, we have the recipe to extend our guides to one kilometer and beyond.”

The research has been accepted in Physical Review X, and is available on arXiv.

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Scientists Have Built a Macroscopic Tractor Beam Using Laser Light : ScienceAlert

Tractor beams make intuitive sense. Matter and energy interact with each other in countless ways throughout the Universe. Magnetism and gravity are both natural forces that can draw objects together, so there’s sort of a precedent.

But engineering an actual tractor beam is something different.

A tractor beam is a device that can move an object from a distance. The idea comes from a 1931 sci-fi story called SpaceHounds of IPC:

“There is such a thing as a ray-screen, you kill-joy, and there are also lifting or tractor rays – two things I’ve been trying to dope out and that you’ve been giving
me the Bronx cheer on. The Titanians have had a tractor ray for ages – he sent me complete dope on it – and the Jovians ‘ve got ’em both. We’ll have ’em in three days, and it ought to be fairly simple to dope out the opposite of a tractor, too – a pusher or pressor beam.”

If science fiction had anything to say about it, tractor beams would already be commonplace, and we could thank Star Trek and Star Wars for their proliferation.

But tractor beams do already exist, though their reach is only microscopic.

Microscopic tractor beams are employed in devices called optical tweezers. Optical tweezers use lasers to move microscopic objects like atoms and nanoparticles. They’re used in biology, nanotechnology, and in medicine.

These tractor beams work on microscopic objects but aren’t strong enough to pull larger macroscopic objects.

Now a team of researchers has successfully demonstrated a macroscopic tractor beam. They published the paper explaining their work in the journal Optics Express. Its title is “Macroscopic laser pulling based on the Knudsen force in rarefied gas,” and the lead author is Lei Wang from QingDao University of Science and Technology in China.

“In previous studies, the light-pulling force was too small to pull a macroscopical object,” said Wang.

“With our new approach, the light pulling force has a much larger amplitude. In fact, it is more than three orders of magnitudes larger than the light pressure used to drive a solar sail, which uses the momentum of photons to exert a small pushing force.”

(Optica)

This macroscopic tractor beam only works under particular laboratory conditions, so it’s a demonstration, not a practical development. At least not yet.

First of all, it works on purpose-built things: macroscopic graphene-SiO2 composite objects that the researchers built for the experiments.

Secondly, it works in a rarefied gaseous environment, which has a much lower pressure than Earth’s atmosphere. While that limits their effectiveness here on Earth, not every world has as much atmospheric pressure as our planet.

“Our technique provides a non-contact and long-distance pulling approach, which may be useful for various scientific experiments,” said Wang.

“The rarefied gas environment we used to demonstrate the technique is similar to what is found on Mars. Therefore, it might have the potential for one day manipulating vehicles or aircraft on Mars.”

Their device works on the principle of gas heating. A laser heats the composite objects, but one side is hotter than the other. Gas molecules on the back side receive more energy, which pulls the object. Combined with the lower pressure in the rarefied gas environment, the object moves.

The researchers built a torsional – or turning – pendulum device made from their graphene-SiO2 composite structure to demonstrate the laser-pulling phenomenon. That demonstration made it visible to the naked eye. They used another device to measure the effect.

“We found that the pulling force was more than three orders of magnitudes larger than the light pressure,” said Wang. “In addition, the laser pulling is repeatable, and the force can be tuned by changing the laser power.”

Other researchers have tackled tractor beams in recent years with mixed results. NASA was interested in pursuing the idea of using tractor beams to gather samples with the MSL Curiosity surface rover. One of Curiosity’s instruments is the ChemCam.

It includes a laser that vaporizes rock or regolith and then a micro imager to measure its components spectroscopically. But NASA wondered if a tractor beam could draw tiny particles from the vaporized sample into the rover for a more complete study.

A NASA NIAC presentation from 2010 said: “If Tractor Beam Technology was included in a ‘ChemCam2’ to pull in dust and plasma particles, tractor beams could add a suite of additional science capabilities:

  • laser desorptive ion spectroscopy
  • mass spectrometry
  • RAMAN spectroscopy
  • X-Ray Fluorescence”

The same presentation said that tractor beams could be used to collect particles from comet tails, ice plumes on Enceladus, and even clouds in Earth’s atmosphere or other atmospheres.

That never materialized, but it illustrates how compelling the idea is.

This new research produced interesting results, though it’s nowhere near an actual practical implementation. There’s a lot of work and engineering needed before it even approaches practicality.

For one thing, there needs to be a well-understood theoretical underpinning that describes how the effect works on objects with different sizes and shapes and with lasers of different powers in different atmospheres.

The researchers know this, of course, but point out that it’s still an effective demonstration of feasibility.

“Our work demonstrates that flexible light manipulation of a macroscopical object is feasible when the interactions between the light, object, and medium are carefully controlled,” said Wang.

“It also shows the complexity of laser-matter interactions and that many phenomena are far from being understood on both macro and micro scales.”

The critical part is that this study moves tractor beams from the microscopic to the macroscopic. That’s a significant threshold that’s difficult to cross.

“This work expands the scope of optical pulling from microscale to macroscale, which has great potential in macroscale optical manipulations,” the authors write in their conclusion.

Spacecraft may very well use tractor beams one day, but they’re unlikely to look anything like they do in science fiction. Star Wars, Star Trek, and Spacehounds of IPC all feature tractor beams in combat and conflict.

But in reality, they could turn out to be valuable scientific tools.

This article was originally published by Universe Today. Read the original article.

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Nearly 50-meter laser experiment sets record in university hallway

A laser is sent down a UMD hallway in an experiment to corral light as it makes a 45-meter journey. Credit: Intense Laser-Matter Interactions Lab, UMD

It’s not at every university that laser pulses powerful enough to burn paper and skin are sent blazing down a hallway. But that’s what happened in UMD’s Energy Research Facility, an unremarkable looking building on the northeast corner of campus. If you visit the utilitarian white and gray hall now, it seems like any other university hall—as long as you don’t peak behind a cork board and spot the metal plate covering a hole in the wall.

But for a handful of nights in 2021, UMD Physics Professor Howard Milchberg and his colleagues transformed the hallway into a laboratory: The shiny surfaces of the doors and a water fountain were covered to avoid potentially blinding reflections; connecting hallways were blocked off with signs, caution tape and special laser-absorbing black curtains; and scientific equipment and cables inhabited normally open walking space.

As members of the team went about their work, a snapping sound warned of the dangerously powerful path the laser blazed down the hall. Sometimes the beam’s journey ended at a white ceramic block, filling the air with louder pops and a metallic tang. Each night, a researcher sat alone at a computer in the adjacent lab with a walkie-talkie and performed requested adjustments to the laser.

Their efforts were to temporarily transfigure thin air into a fiber optic cable—or, more specifically, an air waveguide—that would guide light for tens of meters. Like one of the fiber optic internet cables that provide efficient highways for streams of optical data, an air waveguide prescribes a path for light.

These air waveguides have many potential applications related to collecting or transmitting light, such as detecting light emitted by atmospheric pollution, long-range laser communication or even laser weaponry. With an air waveguide, there is no need to unspool solid cable and be concerned with the constraints of gravity; instead, the cable rapidly forms unsupported in the air.

In a paper accepted for publication in the journal Physical Review X the team described how they set a record by guiding light in 45-meter-long air waveguides and explained the physics behind their method.

The researchers conducted their record-setting atmospheric alchemy at night to avoid inconveniencing (or zapping) colleagues or unsuspecting students during the workday. They had to get their safety procedures approved before they could repurpose the hallway.

“It was a really unique experience,” says Andrew Goffin, a UMD electrical and computer engineering graduate student who worked on the project and is a lead author on the resulting journal article. “There’s a lot of work that goes into shooting lasers outside the lab that you don’t have to deal with when you’re in the lab—like putting up curtains for eye safety. It was definitely tiring.”

All the work was to see to what lengths they could push the technique. Previously Milchberg’s lab demonstrated that a similar method worked for distances of less than a meter. But the researchers hit a roadblock in extending their experiments to tens of meters: Their lab is too small and moving the laser is impractical. Thus, a hole in the wall and a hallway becoming lab space.

“There were major challenges: the huge scale-up to 50 meters forced us to reconsider the fundamental physics of air waveguide generation, plus wanting to send a high-power laser down a 50-meter-long public hallway naturally triggers major safety issues,” Milchberg says. “Fortunately, we got excellent cooperation from both the physics and from the Maryland environmental safety office.”

Without fiber optic cables or waveguides, a light beam—whether from a laser or a flashlight—will continuously expand as it travels. If allowed to spread unchecked, a beam’s intensity can drop to un-useful levels. Whether you are trying to recreate a science fiction laser blaster or to detect pollutant levels in the atmosphere by pumping them full of energy with a laser and capturing the released light, it pays to ensure efficient, concentrated delivery of the light.

Milchberg’s potential solution to this challenge of keeping light confined is additional light—in the form of ultra-short laser pulses. This project built on previous work from 2014 in which his lab demonstrated that they could use such laser pulses to sculpt waveguides in the air.

Distributions of the laser light collected after the hallway journey without a waveguide (left) and with a waveguide (right). Credit: Intense Laser-Matter Interactions Lab, UMD

The short pulse technique utilizes the ability of a laser to provide such a high intensity along a path, called a filament, that it creates a plasma—a phase of matter where electrons have been torn free from their atoms. This energetic path heats the air, so it expands and leaves a path of low-density air in the laser’s wake. This process resembles a tiny version of lighting and thunder where the lightning bolt’s energy turns the air into a plasma that explosively expands the air, creating the thunderclap; the popping sounds the researchers heard along the beam path were the tiny cousins of thunder.

But these low-density filament paths on their own weren’t what the team needed to guide a laser. The researchers wanted a high-density core (the same as internet fiber optic cables). So, they created an arrangement of multiple low-density tunnels that naturally diffuse and merge into a moat surrounding a denser core of unperturbed air.

The 2014 experiments used a set arrangement of just four laser filaments, but the new experiment took advantage of a novel laser setup that automatically scales up the number of filaments depending on the laser energy; the filaments naturally distribute themselves around a ring.

The researchers showed that the technique could extend the length of the air waveguide, increasing the power they could deliver to a target at the end of the hallway. At the conclusion of the laser’s journey, the waveguide had kept about 20% of the light that otherwise would have been lost from their target area. The distance was about 60 times farther than their record from previous experiments. The team’s calculations suggest that they are not yet near the theoretical limit of the technique, and they say that much higher guiding efficiencies should be easily achievable with the method in the future.

“If we had a longer hallway, our results show that we could have adjusted the laser for a longer waveguide,” says Andrew Tartaro, a UMD physics graduate student who worked on the project and is an author on the paper. “But we got our guide right for the hallway we have.”

The researchers also did shorter eight-meter tests in the lab where they investigated the physics playing out in the process in more detail. For the shorter test they managed to deliver about 60% of the potentially lost light to their target.

The popping sound of the plasma formation was put to practical use in their tests. Besides being an indication of where the beam was, it also provided the researchers with data. They used a line of 64 microphones to measure the length of the waveguide and how strong the waveguide was along its length (more energy going into making the waveguide translates to a louder pop).

The team found that the waveguide lasted for just hundredths of a second before dissipating back into thin air. But that’s eons for the laser bursts the researchers were sending through it: Light can traverse more than 3,000 km in that time.

Based on what the researchers learned from their experiments and simulations, the team is planning experiments to further improve the length and efficiency of their air waveguides. They also plan to guide different colors of light and to investigate if a faster filament pulse repetition rate can produce a waveguide to channel a continuous high-power beam.

“Reaching the 50-meter scale for air waveguides literally blazes the path for even longer waveguides and many applications,” Milchberg says. “Based on new lasers we are soon to get, we have the recipe to extend our guides to one kilometer and beyond.”

More information:
A. Goffin et al, Optical guiding in 50-meter-scale air waveguides, arXiv (2022). DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.2208.04240. (paper accepted for publication in the journal Physical Review X)

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University of Maryland

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Nearly 50-meter laser experiment sets record in university hallway (2023, January 19)
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Meet the First Laser Projector With Its Own Disappearing Screen

Image: AWOL

If you’re looking for the big screen movie theater experience at home—we’re talking 100+ inches—a projector is usually the most affordable way to go. But if money is no object and you’d rather skip the cumbersome setup, calibration, and screen mounting steps that usually come with a projector, AWOL’s Vision Vanish packs a short-throw projector, speakers, and a retractable self-standing screen into a single cabinet.

Unlike a TV that you might just plop onto a cabinet or hang on a wall, projectors require a little more planning when it comes to turning a space into a home theater. Long-throw projectors that sit at the back of a room are cheaper, but people walking in and out of the room can cross the beam and block the projected image. Short-throw projectors solve that problem, but at an added cost. Despite the name, they also still often need to sit several inches from a wall to maximize the size of the projected image.

You can always use a big empty wall as a screen, but for optimal results, including on metrics like brightness, contrast, and accurate color reproduction, a highly-reflective projector screen is the preferred way to go. Unfortunately, this often requires complicated installation when going 100 inches and larger. It makes splurging on a giant TV seem like the easiest route, but AWOL’s Vision Vanish looks like it solves many of the pain points of opting for a projector.

Image: AWOL

When installed, the Vision Vanish looks like a mostly non-descript eight to 10-foot long black cabinet, and it can even be used against a wall that’s already covered in artwork, or one with a window, without affecting its performance.

AWOL Vision Vanish Laser TV

At the press of a button, a hidden rolling screen automatically raises out of the back of the Vision Vanish cabinet, while a compartment at the front extends to reveal an AWOL LVT-3500 triple laser projector inside, which ends up positioned at the perfect distance to fill the screen once it’s fully raised. The projector itself boats 3,500 ANSI lumens, HDR 10+ support, built-in 36-watt speakers, and the ability to display 3D content, for those still holding onto that dream.

Image: AWOL

AWOL says the LVT-3500 laser projector included with the Vision Vanish is actually capable of projecting images up to 150-inches in size, but this all-in-one solution comes in two versions, with screen sizes limited to either 100 inches or 120 inches. And while that bundled laser projector currently sells for $4,600 all on its own, the complete Vision Vanish package, including the cabinet and pop-up screen, sells for $15,000 for the 100-inch version or $16,000 for the 120-inch one. Not cheap by any stretch of the imagination, and you can certainly put together your own short-throw projector and screen for a lot less money, but the appeal here is a solution that completely disappears when the movie is over, all at the push of a button.

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Laser Scanning Microscope Built With Blu-ray Parts

Laser scanning microscopes are useful for all kinds of tiny investigations. As it turns out, you can build one using parts salvaged from a Blu-ray player, as demonstrated by [Doctor Volt].

The trick is repurposing the optical pickup unit that is typically used to read optical discs. In particular, the build relies on the photodiodes that are usually used to compute focus error when tracking a disc. To turn this into a laser scanning microscope, the optical pickup is fitted to a 3D printed assembly that can slew it linearly for imaging purposes.

Meanwhile, the Blu-ray player’s hardware is repurposed to create a sample tray that slews on the orthogonal axis for full X-Y control. An ESP32 is then charged with running motion control and the laser. It also captures signals from the photodiodes and sends them to a computer for collation and display.

[Doctor Volt] demonstrates the microscope by imaging a small fabric fragment. The scanned area covers less than 1 mm x 1 mm, with a resolution of 127 x 127, though this could be improved with finer pitch on the slew mechanisms.

While it’s hardly what we’d call a beginner’s project, this technique still looks a lot more approachable than building your own scanning electron microscope.

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Short Term Memory Problems Can Be Improved With Laser Therapy

Summary: Transcranial photobiomodulation (tPBM), a laser therapy delivered to the right prefrontal cortex appears to improve short-term memory in both human and animal models. The therapy, which is non-invasive and has no side effects, could help treat those with short-term memory deficits.

Source: University of Birmingham

Scientists at the University of Birmingham in the U.K. and Beijing Normal University in China, demonstrated that the therapy, which is non-invasive, could improve short term, or working memory in people by up to 25%.

The treatment, called transcranial photobiomodulation (tPBM), is applied to an area of the brain known as the right prefrontal cortex. This area is widely recognized as important for working memory.

In their experiment, the team showed how working memory improved among research participants after several minutes of treatment. They were also able to track the changes in brain activity using electroencephalogram (EEG) monitoring during treatment and testing.

Previous studies have shown that laser light treatment will improve working memory in mice, and human studies have shown tPBM treatment can improve accuracy, speed up reaction time and improve high-order functions such as attention and emotion.

This is the first study, however, to confirm a link between tPBM and working memory in humans.

Dongwei Li, a visiting Ph.D. student in the University of Birmingham’s Center for Human Brain Health, is co-author on the paper. He said, “People with conditions like ADHD (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder) or other attention-related conditions could benefit from this type of treatment, which is safe, simple and non-invasive, with no side-effects.”

In the study researchers at Beijing Normal University carried out experiments with 90 male and female participants aged between 18 and 25. Participants were treated with laser light to the right prefrontal cortex at wavelengths of 1,064 nm, while others were treated at a shorter wavelength, or treatment was delivered to the left prefrontal cortex. Each participant was also treated with a sham, or inactive, tPBM to rule out the placebo effect.

The treatment, called transcranial photobiomodulation (tPBM), is applied to an area of the brain known as the right prefrontal cortex. Image is in the public domain

After tPBM treatment over 12 minutes, the participants were asked to remember the orientations or color of a set of items displayed on a screen. The participants treated with laser light to the right prefrontal cortex at 1,064 nm showed clear improvements in memory over those who had received the other treatments.

While participants receiving other treatment variations were about to remember between three and four of the test objects, those with the targeted treatment were able to recall between four and five objects.

Data, including from electroencephalogram (EEG) monitoring during the experiment was analyzed at the University of Birmingham and showed changes in brain activity that also predicted the improvements in memory performance.

The researchers do not yet know precisely why the treatment results in positive effects on working memory, nor how long the effects will last. Further research is planned to investigate these aspects.

Professor Ole Jensen, also at the Center for Human Brain Health, said, “We need further research to understand exactly why the tPBM is having this positive effect, but it’s possible that the light is stimulating the astrocytes—the powerplants—in the nerve cells within the prefrontal cortex, and this has a positive effect on the cells’ efficiency. We will also be investigating how long the effects might last. Clearly if these experiments are to lead to a clinical intervention, we will need to see long-lasting benefits.”

About this neurotech and memory research news

Author: Press Office
Source: University of Birmingham
Contact: Press Office – University of Birmingham
Image: The image is in the public domain

Original Research: Open access.
“Transcranial photobiomodulation enhances visual working memory capacity in humans” by Chenguang Zhao et al. Science Advances

See also


Abstract

Transcranial photobiomodulation enhances visual working memory capacity in humans

Transcranial photobiomodulation (tPBM) is a safe and noninvasive intervention that has shown promise for improving cognitive performance.

Whether tPBM can modulate brain activity and thereby enhance working memory (WM) capacity in humans remains unclear.

In this study, we found that 1064-nm tPBM applied to the right prefrontal cortex (PFC) improves visual working memory capacity and increases occipitoparietal contralateral delay activity (CDA).

The CDA set-size effect during retention mediated the effect between the 1064-nm tPBM and subsequent WM capacity.

The behavioral benefits and the corresponding changes in the CDA set-size effect were absent with tPBM at a wavelength of 852 nm or with stimulation of the left PFC.

Our findings provide converging evidence that 1064-nm tPBM applied to the right PFC can improve WM capacity.

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Laser that is thinner than a MATCH can burn away excess tissue to treat an enlarged prostate

A laser that’s thinner than a matchstick could be an effective new way to treat an enlarged prostate, without affecting erectile function.

The EchoLaser can be guided into place by ultrasound and will burn away excess prostate tissue without damaging nearby healthy cells. The procedure can be performed in less than 30 minutes under local anaesthetic.

It offers a new approach for treating benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), which affects around 50 per cent of men aged 50 and over.

The prostate, which is usually the size of a walnut, is located below the bladder and wraps around the urethra, the tube that carries urine out of the body.

The prostate gets bigger with age, and in BPH it gets so big that it puts pressure on the bladder and the urethra. This can lead to frequent urination and difficulty starting to pee or trouble fully emptying the bladder. These symptoms can be distressing and interfere with quality of life.

The EchoLaser can be guided into place by ultrasound and will burn away excess prostate tissue without damaging nearby healthy cells. The procedure can be performed in less than 30 minutes under local anaesthetic. A file photo is used above

Treatments range from lifestyle changes, such as drinking less alcohol and caffeine (both of which can exacerbate symptoms) to drugs, including alpha blockers, which relax the muscle in the prostate gland and the bladder neck, allowing urine to pass more freely.

Those whose symptoms don’t respond to medication may be offered surgery to remove the excess prostate tissue.

Transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP) is considered the gold standard surgical treatment for this, but can have unwanted effects, including erectile dysfunction and incontinence.

It can also lead to retrograde ejaculation, where semen travels backwards into the bladder, leading to male infertility. This complication of surgery affects as many as 65 to 75 per cent of men, according to the NHS, and happens as a result of damage to the nerves and muscles between the bladder and prostate.

EchoLaser, it is hoped, could offer a less risky option. It consists of an optical fibre, the width of two human hairs, which carry the laser light inside a fine needle which is around one-third of a millimetre in diameter.

The needle is inserted through the perineum (the space between the anus and scrotum) and guided into position.

Treatments range from lifestyle changes, such as drinking less alcohol and caffeine (both of which can exacerbate symptoms) to drugs, including alpha blockers, which relax the muscle in the prostate gland and the bladder neck, allowing urine to pass more freely. A file photo is used above

When activated, a rotating ball of heat is created at the end of the needle, which heats and destroys the unwanted tissue.

New research based on 38 men shows it to be effective and safe.

All the patients were discharged within eight hours and, after one month, urinary flow had improved by a third, on average, and the amount of urine left in the bladder halved.

The urologists from the University of Florence, who carried out the trial, reported in the journal Frontiers in Urology, said that there were no cases of retrograde ejaculation and all the men no longer needed the medication for enlarged prostate that they had been taking.

Commenting on the research, Professor Raj Persad, a consultant urologist at Bristol Urology, said: ‘Over the years, because of the potential side-effects of the traditional operation for BPH [i.e. TURP], which include bleeding, urethra and bladder neck scarring, various minimally invasive procedures have been devised.

‘If the efficacy of this [EchoLaser] approach is as good as the others, it will be a major contender for BPH treatment being offered with the least inconvenience and potential side-effects for the patient.

‘It may turn out to be a cost-effective treatment to an already financially challenged NHS.’

An extract of a berry from a dwarf pine tree may be as effective as medication for enlarged prostate, according to a study by medics from Assistance Publique Hôpitaux de Paris, published in Drugs & Aging.

Researchers found that the extract of saw palmetto berries was as effective as an alpha-blocker drug at improving urinary flow and reducing the size of the prostate.

It is believed the berry extract has an anti-inflammatory effect, helping to shrink the gland.

Did you know?

Dogs may smell stress from our sweat, recent research suggests — a finding that could help train therapy dogs better. Researchers at Queen’s University Belfast took sweat samples from 36 participants before and after they did a maths quiz and found that dogs were able to identify between the participants’ relaxed and stressed scents, even when they didn’t know the person.

Stress sweat is released in response to cortisol and adrenaline (the stress hormones) by glands in the skin.

Jabs of blood ease dry eyes

Dry eyes can be treated using the patient’s own blood.

Research suggests that injecting a few drops of platelet-rich blood into the tear glands of people with severe dry eye disease led to a 50 per cent improvement in tear production after three months.

Dry eye affects up to 50 per cent of adults, and typically occurs when the lacrimal glands don’t produce enough tears.

In the study, reported in BMC Ophthalmology, researchers took blood from 28 patients and processed it to boost the concentration of platelets, which are rich in growth factors. The solution was injected into one eye, with the other eye acting as a control.

Dry eye affects up to 50 per cent of adults, and typically occurs when the lacrimal glands don’t produce enough tears

Fish can protect brain from toxins

Eating fish strengthens the blood- brain barrier — a ‘wall’ of specialist cells that stops harmful toxins linked with conditions such as dementia from entering the brain, say researchers at Nottingham Trent University and Queen Mary University of London.

Fish and seafood contain a molecule called trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO), which makes the brain barrier less leaky.

Tests by the scientists on mice showed those with the highest levels of TMAO in their blood were less likely to have problems remembering or recognising things, the journal Microbiome reports.

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