Microstructures make a beetle brilliant

Engineers looking to make a variety of surfaces whiter and brighter could learn a few things from a lowly beetle, a new study suggests.

LOVELY. The white scales that cover some Cyphochilus beetles owe their brilliance to an internal network of tiny, randomly oriented fibers. Vukusic/Univ. of Exeter

The tiny scales that cover several beetles in the Cyphochilus genus of southeastern Asia are much whiter than natural substances such as milk and tooth enamel and are almost as bright as a sheet of paper, says Pete Vukusic, a physicist at Exeter University in England.