(no title)
loaph
|
1 year ago
I interpreted this along the lines of it not being a pigment, rather it's black because something about it's physical structure at a small scale causes light to not reflect back. Adding a thin coating of gold would not necessarily change that structure so it would continue not reflecting light.^ pure conjecture
pb060|1 year ago
[1] https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-017-02088-w
majorchord|1 year ago
Maybe the reason radio waves travel poorly through trees is due to the leaves having a fractal-like structure as well? And since light is also just electromagnetic radiation too, it makes sense that this phenomenon could also be used to absorb light itself, if I'm understanding correctly. I wonder if this is how stealth paint on aircraft works?
jmprspret|1 year ago
digging|1 year ago
My confusion is that I would normally expect a layer of gold not to permit any light to pass through. The underlying structure wouldn't be receiving any light, so there would be no photons to trap. Apparently a layer of gold can be applied thinly enough to transmit appreciable light, though.
unknown|1 year ago
[deleted]
baruz|1 year ago
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold_leaf
xelamonster|1 year ago