A £600,000 grant from the Arts and Humanities Research Council and the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council will enable scientists from Nottingham Trent University to develop a new non-invasive tool for conservators. Originally developed for the medical field, Optical Coherence Technology uses infrared light to penetrate an object’s inner structural layer and produce a three-dimensional image. The team hopes the technology can be used to detect signs of deterioration before they become a bigger problem.
Art & Technologyarchive
Infrared-light technology gets funding boost
Technology could foresee deterioration of artworks
30 September 2010