Physicists use ion beams to detect art forgery
January 22nd, 2012 - 5:20 pm ICT by IANSWashington, Jan 22 (IANS) Nuclear physicists are using accelerated ion beams to pinpoint the age and origin of material used in pottery, painting, metalwork and other art.
The results of their tests can serve as powerful forensic tools to reveal fakes in art work, without the destruction of any sample as required in some chemical analysis.
“Art experts play an important role in identifying the style, history and context of a painting, but a solid scientific basis for the proper identification and classification of a piece of art must rely on information from other sources,” said Philippe Collon and Michael Wiescher, nuclear physicists at the University of Notre Dame, the journal Physics Today reports.
“A host of approaches with origins in biology, chemistry and physics have allowed scientists and art historians not only to look below a painting’s or artifact’s surface . . . investigate painting techniques and modifications done by the artist or art restorers, find trace materials. . . ,” added Wiescher and Collon.
The information that is revealed can shed light on trading patterns, economic conditions and other details of history. For example, the amount of silver in Roman coins can indicate the degree of inflation in the ancient economy, according to a Notre Dame statement.
These techniques have allowed not only to analyze the works themselves, but also to determine origin, trade and migration routes as well as dietary information.
As an example, the analysis of the ruby eyes in a Babylonian statue of the goddess Ishtar using the Louvre’s accelerator showed that the rubies came from a mine in Vietnam, demonstrating that trade occurred between those far-apart regions some 4,000 years ago.
At Notre Dame, researchers are using proton-induced x-ray emission (PIXE) and Accelerator Mass Spectroscopy (AMS) to study artifacts brought by local archeologists, Native American cultures in the American Southwest and the Snite Museum of Art extensive collection of Mezo-American figurines.
- Now, power your home with 'solar paint' - Dec 22, 2011
- X-ray analysis on artwork shows artist repainted blonde woman brunette - Apr 04, 2011
- Mosquitoes sniff out victims for blood - Jul 03, 2012
- Colonial era family silver set for auction (With images) - Aug 10, 2012
- Hybrid silkworms spin stronger silk - Jan 09, 2012
- German artists connect to India with hip-hop graffiti - Dec 09, 2011
- Air India: Selling family silver to ease finances - Jul 15, 2012
- 'Fathers responsive to kids have low testosterone' - Sep 10, 2012
- Earliest American residents came at least 15,500 years ago - Mar 25, 2011
- IGNOU opens admission for three visual arts courses - Jul 12, 2012
- Indian avant garde art gets market tilt (Feature, With Images) - Mar 01, 2012
- NCAA finalizes the 'frozen four' - Mar 29, 2011
- Denard Robinson Led Michigan Wolverines Football Team To Its Victory - Sep 12, 2010
- Cheap procedure to reuse seawater - Aug 05, 2011
- Major American museums carry Hindu Lord Shiva statues - Feb 20, 2011
Tags: accelerator mass, american southwest, ancient economy, art forgery, art historians, biology chemistry, collon, goddess ishtar, ion beams, journal physics, mass spectroscopy, migration routes, native american cultures, nuclear physicists, physics today, pottery painting, roman coins, ruby eyes, snite museum, university of notre dame