Salad

Scientists use ‘negative light’ to send secret messages hidden inside heat

Researchers have developed a technology to invisibly transmit information disguised as background thermal radiation. Using a phenomenon called “negative light,” they transferred 100 kilobits of data per second in a way that was completely undetectable to outside observers.

Most methods for concealing data during transfer involve hiding it among other data or encrypting it in a way that makes it impossible to read without a cipher or other means of decryption. The new technique, by contrast, makes the data almost impossible to intercept because there’s no indication it’s being sent at all. It can also be encrypted through traditional means to further harden security, the team wrote in a paper published March 5 in the journal Light: Science & Applications.

Related posts

Stone Age woman was buried like a man, revealing flexible gender roles 7,000 years ago in Hungary

sys.admin

Mokoqi Star Projector Night Light review

sys.admin

Monte Verde, one of the earliest Indigenous sites in South America, is much younger than thought, study claims. But others call it ‘egregiously poor geological work.’

sys.admin

Leave a Comment