HEALTH AND MEDICINE
Originating Technology/ NASA Contribution
Throughout its existence, NASA has
made many amazing discoveries in the field of optics
that have led to improved eye care and eye wear applications
on Earth. Innovations such as laser eye-tracking
for LASIK vision-correction procedures, eye trackers
that enable people with severe disabilities to communicate
and control their environment using only their eye
movements, and scratch-resistant and radiation-blocking
lenses are just a taste of the Space Agency’s optical
accomplishments.
In 2003, the world feasted its eyes
on yet another optical offspring of NASA research:
Westinghouse Lighting Corporation’s Eye Saver™ Easy
Reading Light Bulb. Over 2 years in the making, the
Eye Saver bulb got its start when Barton Pasternak,
executive vice president of Philadelphia-based Westinghouse
Lighting Corporation, recognized a need to concentrate
more light onto a work surface. Pasternak began working
on a reflective insert for lamp shades, but quickly
realized that optimum work space lighting could be
attained with a light bulb. He and friend, Dr. Forrest
Marshall, O.D., the chief executive officer of medical
product developer Marshall Research, LLC, worked
on ideas for innovative light bulbs that would make
seeing easier under working conditions. To develop
these ideas further, Dr. Scott Smith of NASA was
brought in to apply his knowledge of deep space telescope
optics to what would eventually become the Eye Saver
bulb.
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Westinghouse Lighting Corporation’s Eye Saver™ Easy Reading Light Bulb is available in 125-Watt and 3-way (50/125/175-Watt) models. |
Partnership
As director of NASA’s Space Optics
Manufacturing Technology Center at Marshall Space
Flight Center, Smith provides the leadership and
direction required for research, design, development,
fabrication, metrology, and testing of in-flight
optical systems. Smith and his space optics center
colleagues were introduced to Westinghouse Lighting
Corporation by Ben Franklin Technology Partners,
a Pennsylvania network that helps local companies
develop new products to stimulate the state’s economic
growth. Together, Smith’s team and members of Westinghouse
Lighting Corporation, including Pasternak and Marshall,
created a design for a light bulb consisting of a
chrome top that would direct light to areas where
it is needed most. By determining various angle degrees for the chrome top (critical
to enhancing light) and studying different light
sources and bulb shapes, Smith and his NASA colleagues
were instrumental in producing the ideal design for
the product.
Product Outcome
Available in 125-Watt
and 3-way (50/125/175-Watt) models, the Eye Saver
light bulb provides 40 percent more surface illumination
on work and reading surfaces, compared to a standard
incandescent light bulb, and possesses a lightly
frosted finish that reduces eyestrain by diminishing
glare. Additionally, the Eye Saver lasts 2,000 hours,
twice as long as a standard incandescent bulb. The
product is suitable for people of all ages and is
particularly ideal for applications requiring high
light levels, like reading, sewing, crafts, and numerous
other recreational hobbies.
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The Eye Saver™ directs light to areas where it is needed most, whereas a standard
light bulb reflects a majority of the light
off of walls and the ceiling. |
Notably, the light bulb
helps those with macular degeneration and low vision
to see easier in performing tasks that might otherwise
prove daunting due to
their conditions, especially seniors, who are most
susceptible to these eye diseases. Age-related macular
degeneration is the number one cause of vision loss
and legal blindness in American adults over the age
of 60, according to a non-profit organization known
as the Macular Degeneration Partnership. Juveniles
affected by macular degeneration and low vision also
benefit from the Eye Saver bulb’s ability to improve
visual performance.
The practicality of Westinghouse
Lighting Corporation’s Eye Saver technology falls
in line with recommendations made by Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute’s Lighting Research Center, the world’s
largest university-based center for lighting education
and research. According to the Lighting Research
Center, placing light fixtures close to a task area
and selecting bulbs with a high number of lumens
or a strong light output is one of the best ways
to combat the effects of low vision.
Furthermore,
the Discovery Fund for Eye Research recognizes the
Eye Saver as a useful light source for those
who need enhanced lighting due to eye disease. Westinghouse
Lighting Corporation donates a portion of its proceeds
from the sale of each Eye Saver bulb to the Discovery
Fund for Eye Research. The bulb retails from $8.99
to $11.99 and can be purchased through eye care professionals
all around the country, or through select distributors
and retailers such as Stormin’ Norman’s Discount
Optics, Meijer Vision Centers, Boscov’s, Carson Pirie
Scott, JCPenney, and Sears.
Meanwhile, Westinghouse
Lighting Corporation is continuing to develop professional
optical products with the help it has received from
NASA and further guidance from Marshall Research,
LLC. In the works is a portable lamp attachment which
uses a special bulb and motorized focus to develop
intense, no-glare light for the severely visually
impaired.
Marshall Space Flight Center’s Space Optics
Manufacturing Technology Center supports NASA’s Science,
Aeronautics Research, and Exploration Systems Mission
Directorates. The optics center has been
responsible for testing and calibrating the Chandra
X-ray Observatory, the world’s most powerful X-ray
telescope, and is currently testing a new, advanced
mirror system for the James Webb Space Telescope,
the successor to the Hubble Space Telescope.
Eye
Saver™ is a trademark of Westinghouse Lighting Corporation.



