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June 01 2010

21:12

How Butterfly Wing Patterns Could Thwart Counterfeiting Crooks

colorpicThese researchers want to take their butterflies to the bank. They’ve found a way to mimic the nanostructures responsible for giving butterfly wings their colors, and they think butterfly-inspired money designs might hinder counterfeiters.

“We still need to refine our system, but in future we could see structures based on butterflies wings shining from a £10 note or even our passports,” said Mathias Kolle in a university press release. Kolle researched the butterfly’s wing structure with Ullrich Steiner and Jeremy Baumberg at the University of Cambridge.

Butterfly wings don’t use traditional pigment for their flair. Instead, they rely on the way light bounces off tiny multilayer structures on their wings. These micro- and nanostructures come in a variety of shapes (see the “egg carton-like” scanning electron microscope picture below), and scientists have long had inklings as to how different structures result in different colors. But Kolle and colleagues have gone one step further, managing the elusive task of copying this craft.

They studied the swallowtail butterfly (Papilio blumei), and rebuilt the butterfly’s stunning molecular-scaled wing structures. Nature Nanotechnology recently published their findings and a description of their techniques.

SEM

Not using pigment may be a way to keep butterflies safe, as the color reflecting from those tiny structures appears differently to different viewers, perhaps camouflage green to predators, but bright blue to mates.

Adopting their techniques could also protect money, if researchers figure out ways to use their wing-mimicing structures to encrypt information in optical signatures. And that means that copying currency would produce a lot more butterflies in counterfeiters’ stomachs.

Related content:
Discoblog: Video: The Delicate Flutter of Robotic Butterfly Wings
Discoblog: A Butterfly’s Moustache Leads Scientists to a New Species
Not Exactly Rocket Science: Parasitic wasps hitchhike on butterflies by smelling for chemical chastity belts
80beats: A Near-Extinct Blue Butterfly Flourishes Again, Thanks to a Red Ant
DISCOVER: The Calculating Beauty of Butterflies (photo gallery)

Images: Mathias Kolle, University of Cambridge


May 21 2010

15:15

Video: The Delicate Flutter of Robotic Butterfly Wings

Butterfly in the sky, researchers wonder how you fly. To this end, Harvard University's Hiroto Tanaka and the University of Tokyo's Isao Shimoyama have built a butterfly doppelganger by combining angelic plastic wings, balsa wood, and rubber bands. The exact model for this "ornithopter"  is the swallowtail: Tanaka and Shimoyama mimicked the exact size and weight of a flesh-and-blood member of the Papilionidae family. They even made detailed plastic veins on their butterfly's polymer wings. As the BBC reports, a high-speed video of their model's flight allowed Tanaka and Shimoyama to calculate the forces on the insect's wings. Also, by constructing the butterfly themselves, they could determine the essential bug pieces for forward flight. They found, for example, that those pretty veins are a must, but that the creatures need not continually adjust their wings during flight as other insects do. Bioinspiration & Biomimetics will publish their complete paper in June. Given existing robotic caterpillars, is anyone thinking Transformer? Related content: 80beats: Monarch Butterflies Navigate With Sun-Sensing Antennae Not Exactly Rocket Science: Caterpillars must walk before they can anally scrape Not Exactly Rocket Science: Butterflies evolve resistance to male-killing bacteria in record time DISCOVER: The Calculating Beauty of Butterflies (photo gallery)


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