New Face Paint Protects Soldiers Against Bomb Blasts
Zothecula writes "For millennia, face paint has helped soldiers avoid being seen by enemy forces. Recently, however, a team of scientists from the University of Southern Mississippi announced that a new type of face paint may soon also be able to protect against the heat of bomb blasts and other explosions. Additionally, a clear version of the paint could be used by civilian firefighters."
I just have this bad mental image of our men & women in uniform with unicorns etc on their faces being told it will protect them against bombs... much like the magic amulet I have protects me against lion attacks (never been attacked by a lion since I bought it).
"Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
im sure that having this as part of say a Helmet would work even better
Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
Didn't the US Navy use some sort of face paint during WW2 to protect gunners from the heat and flash?
At the time of this post, the "fortune" was "I had pancake makeup for brunch!"
* Not effective against effects of a bomb if you are the one wearing the bomb.
The world is made by those who show up for the job.
Why would firefighters need clear? So what if they painted their faces with some particular color?
Plus would clear actually work as well? Opaque would seem to be a better blocker than transparent or translucent?
How about visibility in night vision devices. If the substance reflects infra-red (which bands?) wouldn't it work like a safety reflective vest, yelling "HERE! I'M HERE!"
So will this protect you from a "real bad day"?
All ideas^H^H^H^H^Hprocesses in this post are Patent Pending. (as well as the process of patenting all postings)
This was also the same college(college of polymers) from USM that presented their work in relation to self-healing cars but also shows uses of other things like cell phones.
"For millennia, face paint has helped soldiers avoid being seen"
"In this film we hope to show how not to be seen. This is Mr. Mohammed Quadrallah of 2345 Ibn Ali Avenue, Lashkar Gah, Helmand province, Afghanistan. He can not be seen. Now I am going to ask him to wipe off his face. Mr. Quadrallah, will you wipe off your face please."
(In the distance Mr Quadrallah wipes off his face with a handkerchief, which is followed by a drone strike followed by Wilhelm scream)
"This demonstrates the value of not being seen."
It probably causes cancer.
If this is, effectively, a heat shield, how will this impact soldiers in the field when they're not directly being blown up?
In war theatres where heat exhaustion is a significant concern, I don't see adding a protective layer to one of the few exposed parts of the body - a part where a great amount of heat is expelled due to its location - as being all that beneficial. I'm reminded of soldiers carrying their helmets in WWII and being penalized for not wearing them due to their weight and temperature discomfort - in relatively mild Europe.
Additionally, due to the absorbent nature of skin, your body's biggest organ, I have to wonder how this might impact long-term health. I imagine it's probably a flexible ceramic with some degree of volume/mass, possibly made with a non-Newtonian fluid. Assuming there's anything in it to be absorbed by the skin, that couldn't be good for you...
~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
When asked if the face paint was too thick, a soldier demonstrating the product said, "Mmmph mmmm mmmh mmmph mmm mmmmph."
I have no such protection against lions and now I am very concerned. I will pay double if you include magic unicorn face-paint.
This is a shot of an early field test. http://mediaconnectiononline.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/wile_e_coyote_ACME.jpg
So strong that the pasty-white /. basement-dwellers will finally be able to emerge from their man-cave.
sudo make me a sandwich
But i really like the idiot's comment at the bottom of the article: "Why a clear version for firefighters? Why not a silver or, better yet, gold version that would reflect infrared? Not very stealthy, but firefighters aren't soldiers. Gadgeteer 24th August, 2012 @ 03:57 pm PDT "
http://i.cubeupload.com/T6cyLu.png
If one is that close to the blast, one has to worry about shrapnel and the pressure wave. Those are much more dangerous than the heat of the explosion.
There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
The Army requirement is for the paint to be 35% DEET. Nowhere does it say the DEET has to be effective.
sudo make me a sandwich
I wonder how well the DEET worked after "encapsulating the DEET within a hydrogel". Wouldn't that mean that the DEET could not get to the air and deter flies?
and one giant leap toward manned solar expeditions!
Forward! -- Emperor Norton, 2012
They probably don't want to use weird colors, for fear of further frightening children who need to be rescued.
Instead, they should be making formulations in a pallet of fleshtones. Firefighters would look a bit weird with the washed out look of a single color opaque makeup, but it wouldn't be unbearable.
If you're standing close enough for the heat to be a problem, won't the shock wave and shrapnel still kill you? I suppose at least you'll leave a prettier corpse, though...
I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?
ISTR something like this was developed in Great Britain about 20 years ago, called "starlite", and could be painted onto objects to protect from intense heat radiation.
"Now listen you maggots! Shoot 'em, blow 'em, kill 'em anyway you like, but remember this. The blue ones are bulletproof, so use knives or grenades. But not on the green ones, those are resistant to all forms of explosives... and poison, I think. The black ones cannot be drowned and the purple ones can safely ignore radiation, so nukes are useless. War has become more complicated, I guess."