Scientists have created a cloaking device that can reroute certain
wavelengths of light, forcing them around objects like water flowing
around boulders in a stream. To creatures or machines that see only in
microwave light, the cloaked object would appear nearly invisible.
"The microwaves come in and are swept around the cloak and
reconstructed on the other side while avoiding the interior region,"
said study team member David Smith at Duke University's Pratt School of
Engineering. "So it looks as if they just passed through free space."
The device [image] only works in the microwave range of light, so
cloaked objects are still visible to humans. Also, it only works in two
dimensions and only for microwaves moving in a plane. A
three-dimensional invisibility cloak would hide an object
completely.The microwave cloak is also slightly reflective and casts a
partial shadow.
Despite these shortcomings, however, the new device is "a very good
achievement," said Ulf Leonhardt, a theorist at the University of St.
Andrews in England who was not involved in the study.
"It's surprising that it's as simple as it is and that it works so
well," Leonhardt said in a related news article about the work in the
journal Science.
The achievement, reported online today by the journal, comes five
months after the same team published a study detailing the precise
mathematical specifications a needed to build such a cloaking device.
Metamaterials
The apparatus was made using "metamaterials," artificial materials
engineered to have precisely patterned surfaces that interact with and
manipulate light in novel ways.
Although called a cloak, the device is not something that can be worn.
Rather, it consists of a series of concentric circles, made of copper
rings and wires patterned onto sheets of fiberglass, and resembles a
loosely coiled reel of film.
The patterns enable the manipulation of light, and the size of the
patterns determines which wavelengths of light can be manipulated.
Smaller patterns affect shorter the wavelengths. Microwaves have
relatively long wavelengths and can be affected with metamaterials
having relatively large patterns. Manipulating visible light, which has
much shorter wavelengths, will require metamaterials with much finer
patterns.
While making those finer patterns is possible with current
nanomanufacturing technologies, the metals used to make the microwave
cloak would behave differently with visible light, Smith said.
"They act very differently at optical wavelengths; they become very
absorptive. A cloaked object would just become very opaque, rather than
transparent," he told LiveScience.
But even if metamaterials are made that can deflect visible light,
don't expect the kind of invisibility offered by Harry Potter's cloak
or Star Trek cloaking devices any time soon.
Human eyes are sensitive to many different wavelengths of light, as
evidenced by the rainbow of colors that we see, and it's still
uncertain if metamaterials can deflect so many wavelengths
simultaneously.
Still useful
But even imperfect cloaking devices might be useful, the researchers
say. Cloaks that deflect radio waves could render an object invisible
to radar or improve cell phone receptions by rerouting signals around
obstructions. They might also be used to protect people from
penetrating and harmful radiation.
"If you knew that you had radiation of a certain bandwidth frequency,
you could have it skirt around some region that you wanted shielded,"
Smith said.
The team says the next step is to create a cloak that works in three
dimensions and to perfect the cloaking effect.
Original
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Scientists Create Cloak of Partial Invisibility
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