The broader goal is to provide a technology platform that can save lives and reduce skin cancers by allowing individuals, on a personalised level, to modulate their exposure to the sun, researchers said.
The device, as light as a raindrop, is powered by the sun and contains the world's most sophisticated and accurate UV dosimeter, they said.
The device called UV Sense was unveiled at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas.
UV Sense has no moving parts, no battery, is waterproof and can be attached to almost any part of the body or clothing, where it continuously measures UV exposure in a unique accumulation mode, researchers said.
Rogers said the device, created in a partnership with L'Oreal, is meant to stick on a thumbnail - a stable, rigid surface that ensures robust device adherence.
It is also an optimal location to measure exposure to the sun.
Users only need to download an app on their smartphone, then swipe the phone over the device to see their exposure to the sun, either for that day or over time.
The app can suggest other, less UV-intense times for outdoor activities or give peace of mind to individuals who are concerned about overexposure.
"UV Sense is transformative technology that permits people to receive real-time advice via mobile phone messages when they exceed their daily safe sun limit," said June K Robinson, research professor at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.
The first pre-pilot field trials launched in December, researchers said.
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