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Light Turns to Sound, then to Scalpel

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ANN ARBOR, Mich., Dec. 26, 2012 — Converting light to sound with a nanotube-coated lens can create finer ultrasound waves than ever before, and the new optoacoustic technique could someday be honed to create an invisible blade for noninvasive — and maybe even painless — microsurgery. There's more to ultrasound than glimpses into the womb: In therapeutic ultrasound, focused sound waves regularly blast apart kidney stones and prostate tumors, for example. The tools work primarily by focusing sound waves tightly enough to generate heat, said Jay Guo, an engineering professor at the University of Michigan. ...Read full article

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    Published: December 2012
    AmericasBiophotonicscarbon nanotubesHarvard Medical SchoolHyoung Won BaacindustrialJay GuolensesmicrosurgeryOpticsoptoacousticsPhotonics Westpolydimethylsiloxanepulsed lasersResearch & TechnologyScientific ReportsultrasoundUMUniversity of MichiganLasers

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