The Star Trek vision
of analysing rocks and minerals with the sweep of a handheld device has taken a
step towards becoming science rather than science fiction.
"We are developing a tricorder," said Robert Downs, associate professor of
geosciences at The University
of Arizona in Tucson.
Professor Downs is using a technique called
Raman
spectroscopy to compile a library of spectral fingerprints for all the
Earth's minerals. About 1,500 of the 4,000 known minerals have been catalogued
so far.
Although the current Raman spectrometer takes up an area the size of a
tabletop, Professor Downs's colleague
M.
Bonner Denton, a professor of chemistry and geosciences at the University of
Arizona, is developing a pocket-sized spectrometer that will be used on the
2009
Mars rover.
A Raman spectrometer fires a laser beam at a sample which excites the
mineral's atoms and emits a weak light that has the unique wavelength of the
material. "It's like a fingerprint," said Professor Downs.
The technique is named after
Sir
Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman, who won the
Nobel
Prize for Physics in 1930 for figuring out the underlying process.
The Raman technique is preferable to other methods of examining minerals as
it does not require a piece of the sample to be ground down or polished in a
specific way.
One use for a handheld version of the spectrometer would be the identif
ication of gemstones.
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