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20240815 Shattered Glass

11 images Created 15 Aug 2024

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  • 20240815 - Shattered Glass - Tempe<br />
<br />
The image is fully released; the model release is on file in Media Relations & Strategic Communications.<br />
<br />
Assistant Professor Shirly Montero, of the School of Interdisciplinary Forensics, works with fourth-year Summer Garcia on calculating data from a 193-nanometer laser ablation of a sample of glass with a bonding agent in the ASU METAL Facility on the Tempe campus on Thursday, August 15, 2024. Montero is currently investigating ways to bond microscopic shards of glass stuck to recovered bullets without contaminating either the glass or the bullet. Using the laser alone on the bullet loosens the glass, thereby ruining the police evidence. The laser and a mass spectrometer will identify elements within the glass that can aid crime-scene investigators. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20240815 Shattered Glass 348.jpg
  • 20240815 - Shattered Glass - Tempe<br />
<br />
The image is fully released; the model release is on file in Media Relations & Strategic Communications.<br />
<br />
Assistant Professor Shirly Montero, of the School of Interdisciplinary Forensics, works with fourth-year Summer Garcia on analyzing data from a 193-nanometer laser ablation of a sample of glass with a bonding agent in the ASU METAL Facility on the Tempe campus on Thursday, August 15, 2024. Montero is currently investigating ways to bond microscopic shards of glass stuck to recovered bullets without contaminating either the glass or the bullet. Using the laser alone on the bullet loosens the glass, thereby ruining the police evidence. The laser and a mass spectrometer will identify elements within the glass that can aid crime-scene investigators. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20240815 Shattered Glass 332.jpg
  • 20240815 - Shattered Glass - Tempe<br />
<br />
The image is fully released; the model release is on file in Media Relations & Strategic Communications.<br />
<br />
Assistant Professor Shirly Montero, of the School of Interdisciplinary Forensics, works with fourth-year Summer Garcia on analyzing data from a 193-nanometer laser ablation of a sample of glass with a bonding agent in the ASU METAL Facility on the Tempe campus on Thursday, August 15, 2024. Montero is currently investigating ways to bond microscopic shards of glass stuck to recovered bullets without contaminating either the glass or the bullet. Using the laser alone on the bullet loosens the glass, thereby ruining the police evidence. The laser and a mass spectrometer will identify elements within the glass that can aid crime-scene investigators. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20240815 Shattered Glass 322.jpg
  • 20240815 - Shattered Glass - Tempe<br />
<br />
The image is fully released; the model release is on file in Media Relations & Strategic Communications.<br />
<br />
Assistant Professor Shirly Montero, of the School of Interdisciplinary Forensics, works with fourth-year Summer Garcia on analyzing data from a 193-nanometer laser ablation of a sample of glass with a bonding agent in the ASU METAL Facility on the Tempe campus on Thursday, August 15, 2024. Montero is currently investigating ways to bond microscopic shards of glass stuck to recovered bullets without contaminating either the glass or the bullet. Using the laser alone on the bullet loosens the glass, thereby ruining the police evidence. The laser and a mass spectrometer will identify elements within the glass that can aid crime-scene investigators. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20240815 Shattered Glass 373.jpg
  • 20240815 - Shattered Glass - Tempe<br />
<br />
The image is fully released; the model release is on file in Media Relations & Strategic Communications.<br />
<br />
Assistant Professor Shirly Montero, of the School of Interdisciplinary Forensics, works with fourth-year Summer Garcia on analyzing data from a 193-nanometer laser ablation of a sample of glass with a bonding agent in the ASU METAL Facility on the Tempe campus on Thursday, August 15, 2024. Montero is currently investigating ways to bond microscopic shards of glass stuck to recovered bullets without contaminating either the glass or the bullet. Using the laser alone on the bullet loosens the glass, thereby ruining the police evidence. The laser and a mass spectrometer will identify elements within the glass that can aid crime-scene investigators. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20240815 Shattered Glass 359.jpg
  • 20240815 - Shattered Glass - Tempe<br />
<br />
The image is fully released; the model release is on file in Media Relations & Strategic Communications.<br />
<br />
Assistant Professor Shirly Montero, of the School of Interdisciplinary Forensics, works with fourth-year Summer Garcia on analyzing data from a 193-nanometer laser ablation of a sample of glass with a bonding agent in the ASU METAL Facility on the Tempe campus on Thursday, August 15, 2024. Montero is currently investigating ways to bond microscopic shards of glass stuck to recovered bullets without contaminating either the glass or the bullet. Using the laser alone on the bullet loosens the glass, thereby ruining the police evidence. The laser and a mass spectrometer will identify elements within the glass that can aid crime-scene investigators. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20240815 Shattered Glass 377.jpg
  • 20240815 - Shattered Glass - Tempe<br />
<br />
The image is fully released; the model release is on file in Media Relations & Strategic Communications.<br />
<br />
Assistant Professor Shirly Montero, of the School of Interdisciplinary Forensics, works with fourth-year Summer Garcia on analyzing data from a 193-nanometer laser ablation of a sample of glass with a bonding agent in the ASU METAL Facility on the Tempe campus on Thursday, August 15, 2024. Montero is currently investigating ways to bond microscopic shards of glass stuck to recovered bullets without contaminating either the glass or the bullet. Using the laser alone on the bullet loosens the glass, thereby ruining the police evidence. The laser and a mass spectrometer will identify elements within the glass that can aid crime-scene investigators. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20240815 Shattered Glass 383.jpg
  • 20240815 - Shattered Glass - Tempe<br />
<br />
The image is fully released; the model release is on file in Media Relations & Strategic Communications.<br />
<br />
Assistant Professor Shirly Montero, of the School of Interdisciplinary Forensics, works with fourth-year Summer Garcia on analyzing data from a 193-nanometer laser ablation of a sample of glass with a bonding agent in the ASU METAL Facility on the Tempe campus on Thursday, August 15, 2024. Montero is currently investigating ways to bond microscopic shards of glass stuck to recovered bullets without contaminating either the glass or the bullet. Using the laser alone on the bullet loosens the glass, thereby ruining the police evidence. The laser and a mass spectrometer will identify elements within the glass that can aid crime-scene investigators. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20240815 Shattered Glass 389.jpg
  • 20240815 - Shattered Glass - Tempe<br />
<br />
The image is fully released; the model release is on file in Media Relations & Strategic Communications.<br />
<br />
Assistant Professor Shirly Montero, of the School of Interdisciplinary Forensics, works with fourth-year Summer Garcia on analyzing data from a 193-nanometer laser ablation and a mass spectrometer graph showing elements of a sample of glass with a bonding agent in the ASU METAL Facility on the Tempe campus on Thursday, August 15, 2024. Montero is currently investigating ways to bond microscopic shards of glass stuck to recovered bullets without contaminating either the glass or the bullet. Using the laser alone on the bullet loosens the glass, thereby ruining the police evidence. The laser and a mass spectrometer will identify elements within the glass that can aid crime-scene investigators. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20240815 Shattered Glass 388.jpg
  • 20240815 - Shattered Glass - Tempe<br />
<br />
The image is fully released; the model release is on file in Media Relations & Strategic Communications.<br />
<br />
Assistant Professor Shirly Montero, of the School of Interdisciplinary Forensics, holds a bullet with white glass embeded between the lead slug and the copper metal jacket, in the ASU METAL Facility on the Tempe campus on Thursday, August 15, 2024. Montero is currently investigating ways to bond microscopic shards of glass stuck to recovered bullets without contaminating either the glass or the bullet. Using the laser alone on the bullet loosens the glass, thereby ruining the police evidence. The laser and a mass spectrometer will identify elements within the glass that can aid crime-scene investigators. Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU News
    20240815 Shattered Glass 391.jpg
  • 20240815 - Shattered Glass - Tempe<br />
<br />
The image is fully released; the model release is on file in Media Relations & Strategic Communications.<br />
<br />
An assistant holds a pane of bullet-riddled windshield glass Assistant Professor Shirly Montero, of the School of Interdisciplinary Forensics, on Thursday, August 15, 2024. She will use shards of the glass with attaching material as part of her investigation of ways to bond microscopic shards stuck to recovered bullets without contaminating either the glass or the bullet. Using the laser alone on the bullet loosens the glass, thereby ruining the police evidence. The laser and a mass spectrometer will identify elements within the glass that can aid crime-scene investigators. Photo by Shirly Montero
    20240815 Shattered Glass.2.jpg