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The Amazing Properties of Aerogel

RideMax writes "We all know NASA is using a substance called 'aerogel' in the Stardust spacecraft to catch pieces of the Wild-2 comet. The NYT is running an article about some other amazing aerogel properties. My favorite quote: 'It's the lowest density of any solid, and it has the highest thermoinsulation properties. Though it would be very expensive, you could take a two- or three-bedroom house, insulate it with aerogel, and you could heat the house with a candle. But eventually the house would become too hot.'" We've looked at Aerogel before.

62 of 556 comments (clear)

  1. Really? by SargeZT · · Score: 3, Funny

    But does it's insulation properties beat that of Trellium-D?

    --
    And why did you staple the trout to the RAM?
    1. Re:Really? by AKAImBatman · · Score: 4, Interesting

      On a more serious note, I wonder if this stuff has any radiation shielding properties? When they fired particles into the gel, they were very quickly stopped. And placing the gel against a bunsen burner doesn't even phase it. If it protects against radiation just as well, its light weight may make it the perfect space ship shielding material.

  2. The house would warm up by ObviousGuy · · Score: 5, Funny

    If you goddamn kids would close the goddamn door!

    --
    I have been pwned because my /. password was too easy to guess.
  3. Too much by phorm · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Though it would be very expensive, you could take a two- or three-bedroom house, insulate it with aerogel, and you could heat the house with a candle.

    Seems to me that in this case, having a few lights left on or PC with a hot CPU left running would quickly make things uncomfortable

    What if it was only used to certain walls where leakage was most common?

    1. Re:Too much by WegianWarrior · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What if it was only used to certain walls where leakage was most common?


      Or perhaps to insulate between windowpanes? Since it's more or less transparent, it'll let the light in, but not heat out...

      --
      Everything in the world is controlled by a small, evil group to which, unfortunately, no one you know belongs.
    2. Re:Too much by Eivind · · Score: 5, Informative

      Vacuum is *not* actually the perfect insulator. It is true that no heat is conducted trough vacuum, but on the other hand vacuum is near perfect in letting heat *radiate*. Now, if you combine vacuum with one or more reflective films to reflect back most of the radiated heat then you have eh, uhm, invented the termos-bottle.

    3. Re:Too much by Znork · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Insulation isnt really the problem anyway. It's easy to make a house you could heat with a candle. Modern houses in countries with cold winters have triple glazing and good insulation, with negligable heat loss through windows and walls.

      The problem is ventilation. Even apart from the issue that you'd suffocate, houses that are too insulated are almost guaranteed get mold problems. You need a constant airflow, and that's where you get the major heat loss. Of course, various techniques like heat exchangers exist to ameliorate this, but unfortunately the technology for 100% efficiency is not quite there yet.

    4. Re:Too much by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The problem is ventilation. Even apart from the issue that you'd suffocate, houses that are too insulated are almost guaranteed get mold problems. You need a constant airflow, and that's where you get the major heat loss.

      THe solution is refrigeration. :) I posted this elsewhere, but decided to come back and respond to you where it would be more useful. ;)

      You need an intake baffle and an exhaust baffle. ON the intake baffle you put a condensor and on the exhaust baffle you put an evaporator. Pump freon through the system, of course. You also need fans to keep the air flow going properly.

      So, freon evaporates in the evaporator, sucking up heat from the air that is being blown out of the house. Then it gets pumped and compressed over to the condensor, where it it condenses into liquid and dumps its heat, right into the air blowing into the house. The heat is kept in the house that way.

      Now, I realize the goal is energy-efficiency, and adding another refrigerator to your electric bill probably isn't energy-efficient, but it's my opinion that there's a solution to the efficient problems of air conditioning, I just haven't spent a lot of time on it--yet. :)

      --
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    5. Re:Too much by waitigetit · · Score: 5, Funny

      Diamond is usually made from carbon, same stuff graphite is made from, but in a different configuration. So, in theory, if you rub it against paper, it should leave a mark.

      I should have known this before I proposed to my girlfriend.

      --
      I could care less, but not without a lobotomy
    6. Re:Too much by caffeineboy · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I saw an interesting plan that was designed to help this;

      Essentially, they were causing a natural convection in the house with a trombe wall with a vent window at the top that could be opened and closed to control temperature. In combination with this they were drawing outside air through ventilator tubes buried in the earth near the house. This was supposed to "earth temper" the air to ~68F before it entered the house - cool in winter, hot in summer.

      They also mentioned that the louvered windows could be made automatic with a system of balances using fluids with appropriate boiling points (like the drinky-bird from the 70s).

      I wonder how well this actually works?

      --
      +++ ATH0 +++
  4. also known as...... by noelo · · Score: 5, Funny

    aka Vaporware... Made of 99.6 percent empty space, the little cube is indeed barely there, with a density one-hundredth that of the hand that holds it.

  5. Aerogel Facts and a Picture by dekashizl · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Some facts, from JPL Aerogel site:
    • It is 99.8% Air
    • Provides 39 times more insulating than the best fiberglass insulation
    • Is 1,000 times less dense than glass
    • Was used on the Mars Pathfinder rover
    And a cool picture of aerogel in somebody's hand.

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    1. Re:Aerogel Facts and a Picture by deglr6328 · · Score: 5, Informative

      It's interesting that Aerogel is always mentioned as being the insulator on the mars Sojourner Rover (and current mars rovers) but it's almost never mentioned that the heat source inside the insulated electronics boxes is not merely waste resistive heating from the electronic components themselves, but from Plutonium Radioisotope Heater Units of a couple ounces each. Maybe it's a good thing they're kept low profile, the clueless luddites would have a field day.

      --
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  6. Likenesses to other successes by NeuralAbyss · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Seems like quite a few successes are discovered by mistake.. in this instance, finding a rejected material from nuclear testing.

  7. Aerogel? by mrpuffypants · · Score: 3, Funny
    -------------
    Aerogel? From this point on this discussion will be rated NC-17...
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  8. balsa wood in the right structure can do as much.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It also has incredible compressive strength. "It can take 2,000 times its body weight without damage," Dr. Tsou said. NASA's Web site shows a 2-gram cube of aerogel (less than 0.1 ounce) supporting a 2.5-kilogram brick (about 5.5 pounds).

    That particular example doesn't seem that impressive, I used to build balsa wood structures that would hold over 600 lbs(~270kg), with only 15 grams of balsa wood and glue, with strict rules on how it could be built. The world record is somewhere in the 1500 lb mark with a similar weight of wood.

  9. Aerogel FAQ by dekashizl · · Score: 5, Informative

    Very good Aerogel FAQ.

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    For news, status, updates, scientific info, images, video, and more, check out:
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  10. Are prices coming down? by Kjella · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I heard of Aerogel long ago, but I assume the issue is the same as then - price. Is it getting better, or is it still for those really really extreme projects only? It's cool in the same way superconductors are, but you don't get to play around with them...

    Kjella

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    1. Re:Are prices coming down? by eric76 · · Score: 3, Informative

      I was curious about the prices, too.

      At What's an aerogel?, there is this:

      Normally, the blankets are a pricey $45 per square foot.

      ... The price should drop to about $3 per square foot when a larger production plant is opened. The blankets already are being used in some high-end winter clothing and, if the price comes down, could find their way into hundreds of products, including building insulation, he added.

  11. Re:R-factor? by dekashizl · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Not sure if all Aerogels are created equally, but this is from 1999 NASA article on Aerogel:
    "A single one-inch thick windowpane of silica aerogel is equivalent to the insulation provided by 20 windowpanes of glass (R-20 insulation factor)."

    --
    For news, status, updates, scientific info, images, video, and more, check out:
    (AXCH) 2004 Mars Exploration Rovers - News, Status, Technical Info, History.

  12. my god... by ruebarb · · Score: 5, Interesting

    let me get this straight....virtually unbelieveable insulation at the coldest of temperatures...creating super greenhouses/habitats and so forth...

    improves the desalination of seawater plants a thousand fold...

    my god....all we have to do is find a cheap or easier way to produce (like we do with virtually everything in the world in the free enterprise system) and we can offer virtually energy free habitats (excess heat can be channelled into electronics and solar can pick up the rest) - as well as a cheap water supply for the world...

    christ...someone get me some chemists and a few venture capitalists.....this is incredible... - and it's real and now...not like those carbon nanofibers people want to use to create space elevators...

    pax
    RB

    --

    ----------
    ah honey, we're all resplendent - Bill Mallonee
    1. Re:my god... by Znork · · Score: 5, Interesting

      "Imagine if your house were perfectly insulated, then you would only need to suck out the heat added by the things inside it (200W per person, another 200W per computer)."

      Well, and the CO2. And the water vapour. And whatever toxics that leak in miniscule amounts from materials inside.

      You dont have to imagine it, it's been tried. It was found to profoundly suck, as people got sick and the houses molded or rotted.

      The technology for building houses with perfect insulation has been here for a long time. Unfortunately, the problem isnt the insulation anymore, the problem is the ventilation. But come up with a highly efficient and cheap heat exchanger system and you could solve that too :).

    2. Re:my god... by Indras · · Score: 4, Interesting

      all we have to do is find a cheap or easier way to produce

      A friend of mine said that the reason aerogel has the light bluish tint to it is that the crystal structure does not form perfectly due to earth's gravity. Aerogel made in zero-G should, in theory, be completely clear.

      Now, if we added a module to the ISS to make transparent aerogel, the ISS would fund itself! I mean, think about it... with how much it costs per cubic inch of the tinted stuff, and the fact that the ISS would have a monopoly on all transparent aerogel produced, you could charge practically whatever you wanted, and sell it to governments around the world.

      --
      The speed of time is one second per second.
  13. It is subject to shattering, catasrophically by dstone · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The article doesn't touch on it, but the NASA FAQ mentions this unique property...

    Q: What happens if I touch it?

    A: Silica aerogel is semi-elastic because it returns to its original form if slightly deformed. If further deformed, a dimple will be created. However, if the elastic limit is exceeded, it will shatter catastrophically, like glass.

    1. Re:It is subject to shattering, catasrophically by fo0bar · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I ordered a vile of aerogel fragments on ebay, and it arrived yesterday. And I can tell you this: yes, it shatters easily, but it all has to do with size ratios. Aerogel can support up to 1000 times its own weight. When you're dealing with a 6x6x1" piece, it can certainly hold up a brick like in the photos you see. But when you're dealing with a fragment the size of a grain of rice, the force of a set of tweezers claming too hard is definitely more than 1000 times its weight. The result is, well, shattering.

  14. Re:balsa wood in the right structure can do as muc by Quixote · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Here is brick-on-aerogel picture. Looks quite cool.

  15. Photos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Some cool shots.

  16. What people don't know about aerogel by state*less · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Here's a nerdy factiod about aerogel that might help your processor speed.

    There has been some close research into using substances like aerogel to improve processor speeds. Apparently the substances can be used as very efficient insulators between traces and components. This is because aerogel and substances like it are mostly made of air, which has a very high dielectric constant so aerogel itself is a very good insulator.

    It's better described here

  17. Re:Some more info by teneighty · · Score: 5, Informative

    This informative comment was lifted from a comment made the last time aerogels were discussed on slashdot (see the original comment here).

  18. more on aerogel by movefaster · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I have a friend who works on this. Here is a NASA newspaper article on her work; here is her website, showing aerogel in many different configurations. If you want to know more about it, you could always drop her a line.

    While I'm sure aerogel has many pracitcal uses (trying not to fall asleep here), the "cool" factor is also very high. I've seen some of her samples, and everything the article says is correct. It's so light it feels like the wind could take it; in fact, if you drop it in water, I think it dissolves. Since the material is so expensive, it's obviously something you don't want to do, since every last piece is precious.

    As you might imagine, a material that's ultra-light and 'holographic' has artistic applications, too. The "brain" image made it onto the cover of Nature neuroscience, and wouldn't look out of place in a design magazine. When you see it up close, the image seems to be 'embedded' in the material, even though it's so light you could easily crush it with your hand. The airiness and delicacy of the material makes the image that much more striking.

    While we're all attuned to the utilitarian value of materials like this, it's always neat to see what people outside of engineering can do with them.

    1. Re:more on aerogel by limekiller4 · · Score: 3, Funny

      From her bio:
      "[My] interests are: shuz, aerogel, Philip Treacy hats, make-up artist Topolino, and vinyl dipped pacifier nipples."

      This defies any sort of comment, so I won't even try.

      --
      My .02,
      Limekiller
  19. Where to buy? by Judg3 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Check it out - this auction on Ebay is selling a 4-6 Cubic inch chunk of Aerogel with a "Buy it Now" price of $160. Considering the auction says it costs about $200 per cubic inch to make, thats a deal. I'm guessing some /.'er with deep pockets will be buying this pretty soon!

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    1. Re:Where to buy? by HKLD · · Score: 3, Informative

      funny as NASA quote 'For relatively small quantities of aerogel the cost is about $1.00 per cubic centimeter'. My maths isnt great but isnt that a hell of a lot cheaper than $200 per cubic inch? Also it says on ebay that this stuffs really hard to get hold of...well 'Aerogel is commercially available in limited quantities from a few companies. These can be found quite easily by searching the Internet using the keyword: aerogel.'

  20. Emphasis on 'very expensive' by PureFiction · · Score: 3, Informative

    you can buy this stuff from MarkeTech for the rock bottom price of $975 a 4x8x0.5" piece.

    I'll let someone else figure out how expensive an entire house would be to insulate.

    Note that this isn't even the really good stuff (the average density of the commercial stuff is only 99.9% air, while the hi-tech versions used by NASA can be as high as 99.99% air or more)

  21. More miracle heating/cooling by arrianus · · Score: 4, Interesting

    For those of you who like stupid science tricks/supercheap climate control, here's a trick for how to heat and cool a house without using any energy (outside of what's free from the Sun):

    First, some background on black body radiation. All matter radiates some light, based on its temperature. By basic thermodynamics, the amount of radiation that a color of matter absorbs in a given frequency range (as opposed to reflects) is directly proportional to how much it radiates (as compared to a perfect black body of the same temperature).

    The sun only radiates on a fairly small set of frequencies, and that set is very different from the frequencies at which a black body at room temperature radiates. If you build a panel of a material that is perfectly absorbent in the frequencies on which the Sun radiates (perfect black body), but reflects in the remaining frequencies (perfectly white on the blackbody frequencies of room temperature), it will lose very little heat to radiation, but absorb a lot from the sun, and it'll get very hot. If you take a body that reflects radiation in the colors the sun emits (white), but absorbs/radiates elsewhere (black), it'll get very, very cool, even in bright sunlight. You can get pretty close to the full 1000W/m^2 of heating (level of Sun's radiation hitting the earth). In cooling, you get pretty close to the ideal from Stefan's Law (http://www.egglescliffe.org.uk/physics/astronomy/ blackbody/bbody.html), which gives 300-500W/m^2 at typical Earth temperatures (over 400W/m^2 heat loss at typical room temperature).

    This means that you can theoretically heat or cool a house with just a painted square on the roof a few square meters in area, if you could just create a material of the right color.

    Problem is the guy who came up with this (and showed it to me) was a physicist and not a chemist, and had no idea how one would go about creating a material whose color was that well controlled.

    Still a nifty concept, eh? If you could make this, it would save a ton of energy, since you'd no longer need to burn gas to heat and use electricity to cool -- just flip a panel on your roof, and the temperature changes (although for heating, the house would need to be well enough insulated to last the night).

  22. Zero-G manufacturing? by phr1 · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Along with perfect ballbearings and other ideas that didn't work out, one of the more interesting suggestions for zero-g (actually microgravity) manufacture was metal foams. The idea is to shoot gas bubbles into molten metal. With no gravity to make the bubbles rise to the top, they'd stay where they were, and cooling down the mix would result in metal foam, sort of like foam rubber except with metal instead of rubber. I wonder if aerogel amounts to the same thing and could be made the same way?

    Ref: The Third Industrial Revolution by G. Harry Stine.

  23. Re:R-factor? by glk572 · · Score: 3, Informative

    good fiberglass is about R5 per inch, this stuff being 39 times better would be about R-195 per inch.

    --
    Well art is art isn't it, but then again water is water; and east is east; and west is west; and if you take cranberries
  24. Practical Application by aiken_d · · Score: 5, Interesting

    See CDT Water for one practical, functional application of aerogel.

    In short, they push contaminated water through aerogel and use electrodes to pull ionic molecules apart. The ions get caught in the aerogel mesh, and the purified water flows through. At least, that's my layman's understanding of it.

    Cheers
    -b

    --
    If I wanted a sig I would have filled in that stupid box.
  25. Very expensive? by Daetrin · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Though it would be very expensive, you could take a two- or three-bedroom house, insulate it with aerogel, and you could heat the house with a candle.

    Maybe I'm missing something, but elsewhere they said "But, Dr. Tsou said, the material was not used much, except in powdered form as a nontoxic anti-caking agent for food."

    If it's so expensive, what kind of food exactly were they using it on? Caviar?

    --
    This Space Intentionally Left Blank
    1. Re:Very expensive? by retro128 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Silicon dioxide is actually very common. Actually it's a form of quartz. Unless I am mistaken it's the same stuff they put in the little white packet that comes with your hard disk to keep condensation from forming in the antistatic bag...

      Regardless, the cost of Aerogel is in its manufacture, not its ingredients. Aerogel is actually just a crystalline structure that forms when SiO2 molecules are suspended in ethanol. The trick is figuring out how to get the ethanol out and replace it with air after the lattices form. This process is called supercritical drying and involves pushing liquid CO2 though the structure at very high pressures. Actually the entire process of how to make the stuff can be found here. It's suprisingly simple. Besides the supercritical drying bit, it seems almost like something you could make yourself.

      --
      -R
  26. Re:Can't wait for the weaponized form... by Lost+Penguin · · Score: 3, Funny

    Thats easy, just use it to bring space viruses from the tails of comets back to earth.
    Wait a minuite.....

    --
    I am the unwilling control for my Origin.
  27. For a more varied selection by Styx · · Score: 3, Informative

    Try these guys (no, I don't have anything to do with them).

    --
    /Styx
  28. Call me tight but... by POds · · Score: 4, Funny

    If Aerogel is that good at insulation, screw the candel, i'll just rely on the body heat of myself and others :/

    --


    Giving IE users a taste of their own medicine since 2005 - http://pods.-is-a-geek.net/
    1. Re:Call me tight but... by IamLarryboy · · Score: 4, Funny

      You miss the point. The candle is there to create the appropriate mood for said heating.

  29. Re:Amazing stuff... by gnomepro · · Score: 5, Informative

    The pictures are amazing. Wow. http://stardust.jpl.nasa.gov/photo/aerogel.html

  30. ask Monsanto by iriles · · Score: 3, Interesting

    A few years later, Kistler left the College of the Pacific and took a position with Monsanto Corp. Shortly thereafter, Monsanto began marketing a product known simply as "aerogel". Monsanto's Aerogel was a granular silica material. Little is known about the processing conditions used to make this material, but it is assumed that its production followed Kistler's procedures. Monsanto's Aerogel was used as an additive or a thixotropic agent in cosmetics and toothpastes. Very little new work on aerogels occurred throughout the next three decades. Eventually, in the 1960s, the development of inexpensive "fumed" silica undercut the market for aerogel, and Monsanto ceased production.
    --- source

  31. Re:a candle? that IS correct! by Gewis · · Score: 5, Informative

    "You could take a two or three bedroom house, insulate it with aerogel, and you could heat the house with a candle."

    Well, sure, anybody can point out the obvious "if you have a crack in your house" stuff, but the idea is still valid. So, don't go pulling out pivnert from 10th grade chemistry and using that as your basis for second-guessing an illustrative statement.

    However, your house would STILL get too hot, even using PV = nRT. V here is constant. R, of course, is the Rieberg constant, the value of which I don't know off-hand. As long as no air leaks out, then as T goes up, P goes up accordingly. But T is on an absolute scale. Kelvins, here. 293.15 K is room temperature, 20 degrees C, and if you heat that up to 30 degrees C, 303.15 K is, in terms of proportionality, not too much of an increase, but hotter than is comfortable, i.e. too hot. Then particles, due to the pressure differential between outside and inside, want to leak out that crack. And what's happened? THE TEMPERATURE HASN'T DECREASED. n in PV = nRT has gone down in order to bring P down to atmospheric pressure outside. Oh, dear, T is higher, and nothing's leaking out! This, silly head, is why it's possible to heat a house in the first place. By your reasoning, a house could never be a different temperature than outside! Which, thank goodness, isn't the case.

    And then, of course, "as a matter of fact," the air is exactly what keeps it hot, and any other thermally insulative materials, i.e. fiberglass or aerogel. When you heat up a house, you run air into a furnace, heat it up, and then pump it through the rest of the house. A candle would heat up the air immediately above it (rising products from chemical reaction) and that air diffuses throughout the house, heating it up. Just like your furnace. True, there's radiative heating from the candle as well, but compare the difference in heat when you stick your finger an inch above a candle vs. an inch to the side of it. Radiative heating is universally dispersive. Convective goes straight up. BIG difference between the two there. Oh, well, it looks like a candle COULD heat up the house insulated with aerogel.

    Yes, I am a physicist.

  32. Re:For sale by eric76 · · Score: 4, Informative

    From What's an aerogel?:

    Lee's Marlborough, Mass., firm specializes in silica aerogels -- "puffed up sand," as he calls it. He calls aerogels the original nanotechnology because the hair-like structures are only a nanometer -- a billionth of a meter -- in diameter and separated by only 20 nanometers.

    The spacing is so tight, Lee said, that air molecules don't have much room to vibrate. And if an air molecule can't vibrate, it has trouble exciting other air molecules. And that means, he concluded, that heat and sound are not transmitted readily through an aerogel.

  33. That is nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    "Air molecules don't have room to vibrate"? In other words, their temperature magically drops to 0 Kelvin? What I think he is trying to say is they don't have room to convect. Molecules vibrate as a function of temperature. Even if the air molecule were chemically bonded to something, it would still vibrate as a function of temperature.

  34. Paint is cheap, paintings aren't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Powder is cheap, but the bulk aerogel made from it is a little bit of a trick.

    Iron is pretty cheap too, but a single perfect crystal of appreciable size starts to make Platinum look positively affordable. Or graphite to diamond.

    It's not so much the atoms that make many things expensive so much as how they're put together.

  35. Link me up by ZeroExistenZ · · Score: 3, Informative
    --
    I think we can keep recursing like this until someone returns 1
  36. Hot-aero? or will prices really come down? by fantomas · · Score: 3, Informative

    Anyvbody with some industry knowledge care to comment on the chances of the prices coming down? This material sounds like it would be phenomonal to help with insulation in industrial and domestic applications, do a world of good to sort out global warming. The byline about a candle heating a house seems a bit of hyperbole but if it's even in the same ballpark as this then imagine the savings people would make on heating / air conditioning.


    Realistically, is it likely to become affordable? like teflon went from space product to saucepans? or is it like space travel (by the 1970s we'll all be travelling to the moon on our holidays for no more than the price of a holiday in Florida...)?

  37. Possible military application by burbilog · · Score: 3, Interesting

    IR-invisibility cloak. Just wear it and be hidden from all IR eyes in the sky... neat.

    1. Re:Possible military application by 1s44c · · Score: 3, Insightful

      R-invisibility cloak. Just wear it and be hidden from all IR eyes in the sky... neat.#

      Just wear it and burn to death within an hour more like.

      You could always fill your pants with dry ice before putting it on, that might buy you another hour.

  38. "Aerogel": A Ridiculous Liberal Myth by waitigetit · · Score: 4, Funny

    "Aerogel": A Ridiculous Liberal Myth

    It amazes me that so many allegedly "educated" people have fallen so quickly and so hard for a fraudulent fabrication of such laughable proportions. The very idea that a solid material happens to be so light, showing remarkable properties like near-perfect insulation, is ludicrous. Furthermore, it is an insult to common sense and a damnable affront to intellectual honesty and integrity. That people actually believe it is evidence that the liberals have wrested the last vestiges of control of our public school system from decent, God-fearing Americans.

    --
    I could care less, but not without a lobotomy
  39. More pictures here by Kwelstr · · Score: 3, Informative

    I've found a "Silica aerogel photo gallery"

    http://eande.lbl.gov/ECS/aerogels/saphoto.htm

    Some of the pics are really amazing. Cool stuff!!!

    --


    ~~~Please pass the salt, I hate unsalted MD5s :-/
  40. Re:Aerogel Facts by egede · · Score: 3, Informative

    Aerogel is also used within particle physics for telling different types of particles apart in Cherenkov detectors.

    In any transparent material particles will emit light in a cone around their trajectory when they are travelling faster than the speed of light in that material (analogous to sonic boom produced by plane going faster than speed of sound). From measuring the angle the light is emitted at we can work out the velocity. The range of velocities we are sensitive to depends on the refractive index of the material which is where aerogel comes into the game. We have gasses with refractive indices very close to one (n = 1.0005 for CF4) or glass with large refractive index (n=1.47 for quartz) but no normal material in between. Aerogel with a refractive index around 1.03 gives us new possibilities.

    Within a particle physics experiment we can use a magnetic field to determine the momentum of a particle from the curvature of its trajectory. If we put this together with the measurement of its velocity from the Cherenkov detector we can work out the mass. This allows us to distinguish pions and kaons in an experiment like LHCb which is currently under construction. Here CF4 (gas), C4F10 (heavier gas) and aerogel are used to give coverage of a wide velocity range.

  41. Re:I wonder by SpotWeld · · Score: 5, Informative

    The short answer is that yes it could, but only temporarily.

    I believe Aerogel is an open celled matrix, meaning that the eventually the hydrogen (especially hydrogen) would leak out causing a block of the stuff to return to the ground.

    I suppose it would be possible to seal a block of aerogel in some sort of polymer making for a structurally solid balloon.

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    ..of ships and shoes and sealing wax, of cabbages and kings.
  42. See it for yourself by Iffy+Bonzoolie · · Score: 3, Interesting

    For several years at Disneyland, they've had a sample of it in FutureLand or TomorrowLand or whatever it's called. Sort of across the path from Star Tours, there is a whole exhibit about the US Space Program. Inside a glass case, they have a square of Aerogel held up. Unfortunately, they don't let you touch it or anything. But it is interesting to look at - it's hard to find the edges of the material, even when you are concentrating.

    -If

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    Run a pencil-and-paper RPG campaign with your far-off friends: Gametable!
  43. Highest density? by IDigUNIX · · Score: 3, Funny

    Ok, so if aerogel has the lowest density of any solid, what has the highest density?

    Right now I'm thinking that it's either corporate America's CxO's, or perhaps whoever keeps watching all of these dumbass reality shows on tv.

  44. Re:I wonder by Quantum-Sci · · Score: 3, Informative

    It's really just silica atoms, with great spaces between. It is a solid, and so could never be lighter than air, unless filled with a lighter-than-air gas, as the previous poster said.

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    Campaign finance reform is national security.
  45. Aerogel and supercapacitors by Cthefuture · · Score: 3, Informative

    Aerogel is cool stuff. I've recently been experimenting with aerogel capacitors. These suckers can hold a huge amount of energy. Right in front of me I have two 2.5V 50-farad (yes farads, not microfarads) capacitors.

    Fun for robotic projects and such. Many common devices are using super-capacitors like these. Those tiny remote control cars and those battery-free flashlights are a couple examples.

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    The ratio of people to cake is too big