homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Researchers develop octopus skin-inspired infrared camouflage

The advancement could help hide objects from heat sensors.

Francesca Schiopca
March 29, 2018 @ 9:35 pm

share Share

Octopods are great at camouflage — they even surpass the ability of chameleons. But how does their camouflage system work?

The secret is chromatophores – skin cells that contain different pigments that are wired to the nervous system and to a radial muscle structure that allows it to change in length and thus change the color saturation of the cell. Each chromatophore is linked to the nervous system by a neuron, making the color change happen in less than a second.

 

They are also able to mimic textures via projections on the skin named papillae and can mirror the environment through iridophores —- reflective cells found in the octopi’s skin tissue.

Scientists have long been trying to develop the perfect camouflage system. Even though they succeeded to make objects invisible to the naked human eye, infrared cameras, that allow us to see temperature variations in colors would still be able to detect them because the electrical components that made visual camouflage possible would heat up, demonstrating their bluff.

So, researchers tried to imitate Mother Nature’s design: the octopod’s chromatophores. By combining special electrodes, wrinkled membranes, and an infrared-reflective coating, Chengyi Xu and colleagues created a synthetic device that mimics cephalopod skin. When applying an electrical current, the membrane expands, reflecting more light of a given wavelength. When the electrical current stops flowing through it, the membrane contracts. You can see below how the membrane reacts to electrical stimuli.

Researchers created a squid-shaped version of the device and analyzed its ability to camouflage. Then, they used an infrared camera to measure the changes in the device’s temperature. Scientists report that altering the reflectance of the device so that its temperature changed by a mere 2°Celsius was sufficient to mask its existence from an infrared camera.

Who knows — maybe in the future we could buy octopus skin clothes and activate them when encountering our exes.

share Share

If you use ChatGPT a lot, this study has some concerning findings for you

So, umm, AI is not your friend — literally.

Miyazaki Hates Your Ghibli-fied Photos and They're Probably a Copyright Breach Too

“I strongly feel that this is an insult to life itself,” he said.

Bad microphone? The people on your call probably think less of you

As it turns out, a bad microphone may be standing between you and your next job.

This AI Tool Can Scan Your Food and Tell You Exactly How Many Calories and Other Nutrients It Has

Knowing what's inside your food has never been so easy.

Astronauts Can Now Print Metal in Space and It’s a Game Changer for Future Missions

ESA’s metal 3D printer aboard the ISS could revolutionize space exploration by enabling self-sufficient missions.

This Tiny Robot Swims Like a Worm — and Could Explore Alien Oceans

Marine flatworms have perfected smooth, undulating motion over millions of years of evolution. Now, scientists have taken inspiration to create a highly agile robot.

Sam Altman said it was "hopeless" for smaller AIs to compete with OpenAI. DeepSeek proved him wrong

It’s hard to overstate just how impactful DeepSeek has been. In a couple of days, it rattled the entire AI industry, shattering the aura of invincibility that OpenAI (and American tech companies in general) had built around themselves. DeepSeek’s new AI is the number one most downloaded free app on the Apple Store, and it’s […]

A paralyzed man just piloted a virtual drone using his brain

This new brain-computer interface offers a glimpse into the future for millions with motor impairments.

Single-Crystal Batteries Could Power EVs for Millions of Miles

A battery with this technology has been constantly charging and discharging for 6 years and it's at 80% of capacity.

Godfather of AI says there's a 10-20% chance AI wipes out humanity in 30 years

AI could bring an industrial revolution-level change, but at what cost?