Dear All,

This item appeared in Michael Quinion's weekly newsletter, 'World Wide
Words'.

2. Turns of Phrase: T-ray
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Doctors may soon have a new diagnostic technique, which penetrates
just a few millimetres below the skin, an area of the body that
other procedures like X-rays can't easily image.

The scanning technology is based on "T-rays", short for "terahertz
rays". This is a type of radiation similar to X-rays and light, but
with frequencies around a million million cycles per second (the
prefix "tera-" refers to a factor of 10 to the power of 12). These
rays lie in the region between infra-red and microwave radio
frequencies, a region that's sometimes called "quasi-optics". It's
a type of radiation that has been hard to generate in the past, but
a team at the Toshiba Cambridge Research Laboratory has recently
found a relatively simple way, by firing a laser at a semiconductor
crystal.

T-rays are sensitive to very small changes in the composition of
the materials they pass through, so they're excellent for imaging.
They also have the highly desirable property that they don't damage
living tissues. It's likely that the first medical application will
be to image skin cancers prior to surgery.

Various reports suggest that T-rays' time is coming - they're also
being investigated for many other purposes. Because they penetrate
clothing, security experts hope that T-rays will prove useful in
airport scanners - to show up concealed weapons, for example. They
may help to create ever-more-detailed semiconductor displays. And
astronomers hope that they may reveal details of comets and other
astronomical bodies.

[U.S. News & World Report, 28 July 2003]: Recent breakthroughs -
combined with a range of potential applications stretching from
diagnosing cancer to detecting dangerous flaws in space shuttle
components - are moving T-rays out of the world of academic
curiosity toward the mainstream.

[New Scientist, 30 Aug. 2003]: T-rays could also be used for real-
time imaging during surgery, to highlight tumour cells the surgeon
has missed.

**

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Cheers,

Pat Naughtin LCAMS
Geelong, Australia

Pat Naughtin is the editor of the free online newsletter, 'Metrication
matters'. You can subscribe by sending an email containing the words
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