Ryan
Member
+1,230|7301|Alberta, Canada

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Scientists have created two new types of materials that can bend light the wrong way, creating the first step toward an invisibility cloaking device.

One approach uses a type of fishnet of metal layers to reverse the direction of light, while another uses tiny silver wires, both at the nanoscale level.

Both are so-called metamaterials -- artificially engineered structures that have properties not seen in nature, such as negative refractive index.

The two teams were working separately under the direction of Xiang Zhang of the Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center at the University of California, Berkeley with U.S. government funding. One team reported its findings in the journal Science and the other in the journal Nature.

Each new material works to reverse light in limited wavelengths, so no one will be using them to hide buildings from satellites, said Jason Valentine, who worked on one of the projects.

"We are not actually cloaking anything," Valentine said in a telephone interview. "I don't think we have to worry about invisible people walking around any time soon. To be honest, we are just at the beginning of doing anything like that."

Valentine's team made a material that affects light near the visible spectrum, in a region used in fiber optics.

"In naturally occurring material, the index of refraction, a measure of how light bends in a medium, is positive," he said.

"When you see a fish in the water, the fish will appear to be in front of the position it really is. Or if you put a stick in the water, the stick seems to bend away from you."

These are illusions caused by the light bending when it moves between water and air.

NEGATIVE REFRACTION

The negative refraction achieved by the teams at Berkeley would be different.

"Instead of the fish appearing to be slightly ahead of where it is in the water, it would actually appear to be above the water's surface," Valentine said. "It's kind of weird."

For a metamaterial to produce negative refraction, it must have a structural array smaller than the wavelength of the electromagnetic radiation being used. This was done using microwaves in 2006 by David Smith of Duke University in North Carolina and John Pendry of Imperial College London.

Visible light is harder. Some groups managed it with very thin layers, virtually only one atom thick, but these materials were not practical to work with and absorbed a great deal of the light directed at it.

"What we have done is taken that material and made it much thicker," Valentine said.

His team, whose work is reported in Nature, used stacked silver and metal dielectric layers stacked on top of each other and then punched through with holes. "We call it a fishnet," Valentine said.

The other team, reporting in Science, used an oxide template and grew silver nanowires inside porous aluminum oxide at tiny distances apart, smaller than the wavelength of visible light. This material refracts visible light.

Immediate applications might be superior optical devices, Valentine said -- perhaps a microscope that could see a living virus.

"However, cloaking may be something that this material could be used for in the future," he said. "You'd have to wrap whatever you wanted to cloak in the material. It would just send light around. By sending light around the object that is to be cloaked, you don't see it."
Surgeons
U shud proabbly f off u fat prik
+3,097|6947|Gogledd Cymru

Berkeley
lulz

Edit: Sounds pretty cool though.

Last edited by The Sheriff (2008-08-11 09:05:08)

Airwolf
Latter Alcoholic
+287|7178|Scotland
Pretty awesome, I don't see HOW it works though. I can visualise it perceptually.. but the whole negative refraction thing is above me atm
kptk92
u
+972|6866|tc_london
This shit is soooo Harry Potter
https://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/44910000/jpg/_44910246_cloak226.jpg

Last edited by kptk92 (2008-08-11 09:07:39)

jord
Member
+2,382|7136|The North, beyond the wall.
Thermal goggles.
loubot
O' HAL naw!
+470|7036|Columbus, OH
yes, oh yesss soon my evil plan will go into motion bwhahahaha /stroke Mr.Whisker's head
Cyrax-Sektor
Official Battlefield fanboy
+240|6606|San Antonio, Texas
I'd buy that for a dollar. Work harder!!
Snake
Missing, Presumed Dead
+1,046|7024|England

https://www.cncden.com/cnc3_nodunits_new/nod_stealth.jpg


Ultrafunkula
Hector: Ding, ding, ding, ding...
+1,975|6931|6 6 4 oh, I forget

Snake
Missing, Presumed Dead
+1,046|7024|England

James Bond > C&C
M.O.A.B
'Light 'em up!'
+1,220|6680|Escea

https://photos1.flickr.com/2690561_84ff8bb071_o.jpg
Roger Lesboules
Ah ben tabarnak!
+316|7035|Abitibi-Temiscamingue. Québec!

Snake wrote:

James Bond > C&C
QFT!
Blehm98
conservative hatemonger
+150|6921|meh-land

Airwolf wrote:

Pretty awesome, I don't see HOW it works though. I can visualise it perceptually.. but the whole negative refraction thing is above me atm
essentially it funnels light through from one side of an object to another, and then spits it back out
of course, it is in no way perfect so it has strange effects on shadows and it looks hazy, and if you were inside it would be pitch black


actually tbh if i'm not mistaken they use devices that cloak from microwaves, the larger wavelengths are easier to bend because the metal rings don't need to be as big, with visual and smaller wavelengths the rings need to be progressively smaller

edit:these have been around for a couple years i believe too

donno why another article about it when the ones from last year are just as informative, if not moreso

Last edited by Blehm98 (2008-08-11 11:44:51)

SamTheMan:D
Banned
+856|6432|England

wicked awsm
Uzique
dasein.
+2,865|6928
Cool but kinda useless...

It's already redundant and useless in military application by basic-basic technology that's been around for a long time and is cheaper to use/acquire; X-Ray, Infra-red and possibly even UV-light will spot a person wearing this 100-billion-dollar Snake Pliskin suit.
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/
Surgeons
U shud proabbly f off u fat prik
+3,097|6947|Gogledd Cymru

For a metamaterial to produce negative refraction, it must have a structural array smaller than the wavelength of the electromagnetic radiation being used.
When they start making it with structural arrays of <0.001nm then it will be able to refract gamma/xrays
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|7058|132 and Bush

Spoiler (highlight to read):
FLIR
Xbone Stormsurgezz
Mekstizzle
WALKER
+3,611|7079|London, England

Kmarion wrote:

Spoiler (highlight to read):
FLIR
It's much easier to camouflage yourself from thermal imaging than it is from visible light. Infrared isn't respective of your envioronment, if you can shield your body heat then you don't have to think about it again.
blah
macaroni with cheeseeee
+111|6205|Croatia
I can cloak myself in pitch black
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|7058|132 and Bush

Mek-Stizzle wrote:

Kmarion wrote:

Spoiler (highlight to read):
FLIR
It's much easier to camouflage yourself from thermal imaging than it is from visible light. Infrared isn't respective of your envioronment, if you can shield your body heat then you don't have to think about it again.
Sounds like you are just piling on more and more. It just seems like you are losing mobility with each layer. FLIR cameras are getting incredibly advanced as well. Unless you can physically reduce your body temp, I don't see getting around a camera that can see through 10 feet of concrete (and much more). You've got to assume that both sides will catch up. I worry about it giving a false sense of security. Of course a battlefield opponent might not be as up to date .
Xbone Stormsurgezz
oldgoat
Alcohol & calculus don't mix. Never drink & derive
+5|6975
so do you still see shadows of like a cloaked person?  or is the shadow gone also.  and does it work even if your like standing right next to him?  cloak engaged
latinolink
plop plop flop flop
+11|7114|west liberty IA
gonna make a see through clothing line.
jord
Member
+2,382|7136|The North, beyond the wall.
I so a guy running from a Police Helicopter at night and he fell into a freezing river. His body temperature was so low had he been there one minute longer he would have died. The Police helicopter was still seeing a Grey Silhouette on the river bank...

Thermals 4 life.
.Sup
be nice
+2,646|6911|The Twilight Zone
Cloak was already invented in Japan wasn't it?
https://www.shrani.si/f/3H/7h/45GTw71U/untitled-1.png
Jebus
Looking for my Scooper
+218|6222|Belgium
o cool so we can play harry potter irl soon

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