Halifax tech firm says new eyewear protects against laser attacks | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
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Halifax tech firm says new eyewear protects against laser attacks

A pair of metaAIR protective glasses are shown in Dartmouth, N.S., on Friday, May 4, 2018. Pilots and military personnel will soon be sporting the latest in protective eyewear thanks to a Nova Scotia based tech company. Dartmouth-Cole Harbour MLA Darren Fisher announced at a press conference at Metamaterial Technologies Inc. in Dartmouth on Friday that the Canadian government will invest $3 million in the company's first commercial product: metaAIR eyewear. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Fadila Chater
Original Publication Date May 04, 2018 - 9:06 AM

HALIFAX - A Halifax technology company has begun commercial production on protective eyewear that it says can protect pilots and military personnel from the growing threat of potentially disabling laser strikes.

Metamaterial Technologies Inc. said the aviator-style metaAIR eyewear, which will be available for commercial use in a few months, refracts laser light using a photosensitive material called photopolymer.

The federal government announced Friday the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency will invest $3 million in the eyewear.

The metaAIR product will also be installed into windscreens on commercial planes for companies including Airbus.

"It's one of those things you kind of never even envisioned or imagined would be needed. But in today's world it is," said Dartmouth-Cole Harbour Liberal MP Darren Fisher at a Friday news conference.

Metamaterial CEO George Palikaras said a laser scribing process changes the molecular structure of the photopolymer and creates a nanostructure that interacts destructively with light, causing laser light to refract off the plastic lens like a mirror.

"Our vision has been to change the way we use, interact and benefit from light," Palikaras said. "And this is because light impacts all our lives."

During a news conference and demonstration, Palikaras said the eyewear can protect pilots, police and the military from threats similar to what the Pentagon said this week were laser attacks on U.S. military aircraft by Chinese personnel in Djibouti.

Laser attacks, Palikaras said, are a growing global trend accelerated by the lowering costs and rising strength of common commercial lasers.

The federal money will be used to increase the product's manufacturing capacity.

News from © The Canadian Press, 2018
The Canadian Press

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