When businessman Malcolm Higgins heard yet another complaint about leaf sludgeon Britain’s railway lines causing delays, he wondered if he could fix it with a laser. Not being a scientist, or knowing anything about trains, lasers or leaves, he hired help from defence researchers at DERA and the Rutherford Appleton lab. They found that the hard, slippery black sludge could be chipped off the rail by nanosecond pulses of infrared laser light, which heat and rapidly expand the cellulose it contains. Higgins’s company, LaserThor, is now testing a prototype that can clear the track when mounted on service trains travelling at up to 60 kilometres per…
To continue reading, today with our introductory offers
Advertisement
More from 快猫短视频
Explore the latest news, articles and features
Popular articles
Trending 快猫短视频 articles
1
Glaciers in the 'roof of the world' have suddenly started melting
2
The best new science-fiction books of June 2026
3
Does gravity create reality? A shocking path to a theory of everything
4
Why your brain needs plenty of 鈥淎ha!鈥 moments
5
How a radical new view of life could reveal its origin 鈥 and aliens
6
Pancreatic cancer halted by virus injection in three patients
7
Aim high but don't shoot for the moon, mathematicians advise
8
Embryos made without sperm or eggs reveal why many pregnancies fail
9
Mirror life: 快猫短视频s clash over threat of lab-engineered bacteria
10
Will lab-grown sperm let infertile men have children of their own?



