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ALIEN INTERVIEW - THE NEW EARTH - Earth Changes and The ...

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they will contain IC s in fabric to develop fabric keyboards <strong>and</strong> other wearable computer<br />

devices. <strong>The</strong>se types of products are known as Interactive electronic textiles (IET).<br />

Research to support IET development is being conducted in many universities. Growing<br />

consumer interest in mobile, electronic devises will initiate the dem<strong>and</strong> for IET products.<br />

Technical textiles include textile structures for autmotive applications, medical textiles<br />

(e.g. implants), geotextiles (reinforcement of embankments), agrotextiles (textiles for crop<br />

protection), protective clothing (e.g. against heat <strong>and</strong> radiation for fire figther clothing,<br />

against molten metals for welders, stab protection <strong>and</strong> bulletproof vests), spacesuits<br />

(astronauts)."<br />

Biotextiles are structures composed of textile fibers designed for use in specific biological<br />

environments where their performance depends on biocompatibility <strong>and</strong> biostability with cells<br />

<strong>and</strong> biological fluids. Biotextiles include implantible devices such as surgical sutures, hernia<br />

repair fabrics, arterial grafts, artificial skin <strong>and</strong> parts of artificial hearts. <strong>The</strong>y were first<br />

created 30 years ago (1978) by Dr. Martin W. King, a professor in North Carolina State<br />

University’s College of Textiles.<br />

Medical textiles are a broader group which also includes b<strong>and</strong>ages, wound dressings,<br />

hospital linen, preventive clothing etc. Antiseptic biotextiles are textiles used in fighting<br />

against cutaneous bacterial proliferation. Zeolite <strong>and</strong> triclosan are at the present time the<br />

most used molecules. This original property allows to inhibits the development of odors or<br />

bacterial proliferation in the diabetic foot."<br />

-- Reference: Wikipedia.org<br />

225<br />

"... mechanisms for creating, amplifying <strong>and</strong> channeling light particles or waves<br />

as a form of energy."<br />

In 1947, Willis E. Lamb <strong>and</strong> R. C. Retherford found apparent stimulated emission in<br />

hydrogen spectra <strong>and</strong> made the first demonstration of stimulated emission. In 1950, Alfred<br />

Kastler (Nobel Prize for Physics 1966) proposed the method of optical pumping.<br />

<strong>The</strong> work of Schawlow <strong>and</strong> Townes, however, can be traced back to the 1940s<strong>and</strong> early<br />

50s* <strong>and</strong> their interest in the field of microwave spectroscopy, which had emerged as a<br />

powerful tool for puzzling out the characteristics of a wide variety of molecules.<br />

<strong>The</strong> invention of the laser, which st<strong>and</strong>s for light amplification by stimulated emission of<br />

radiation, can be dated to 1958 with the publication of the scientific paper, Infrared <strong>and</strong><br />

Optical Masers, by Arthur L. Schawlow, then a Bell Labs researcher, <strong>and</strong> Charles H.<br />

Townes, a consultant to Bell Labs. That paper, published in Physical Review, the journal of<br />

the American Physical Society, launched a new scientific field <strong>and</strong> opened the door to a<br />

multibillion-dollar industry.<br />

Many different materials can be used as lasers. Some, like the ruby laser, emit short pulses<br />

of laser light. Others, like helium-neon gas lasers or liquid dye lasers emit a continuous<br />

beam of light.<br />

*NOTE: According to the book, "<strong>The</strong> Day After Roswell", reports about microwave <strong>and</strong> light<br />

projecting components from the Roswell "flying disc", technology were "leaked" to Bell<br />

Laboratories through the Pentagon.<br />

307

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