Want to hide your space cruiser from sight? We're getting there.
One of the most enticing tenants of sci-fi has always been
invisibility. Whether it's a Klingon Bird of Prey or a Panther Modern's mimetic
polycarbon, the theoretical effect is the same: to hide the user from sight.
While one mostly sees such technology being used for military purposes in books
and movies, there are some applications that are grounded
in reality.
One approach to creating a cloaking device is using something called a
superlens. A superlens has what's called a negative refraction index. This
allows it to bend electromagnetic waves back upon themselves, in effect, using
interference to render an object invisible.
Graeme Milton, of the University of Utah, is working on mathematical models for
superlenses. Thus far, the technology is not shaping up to be something that
would be feasible for hiding something large, like naval destroyers.
"We've seen it numerically -- not in practice, but we've got a theoretical
proof that collections of particles become invisible," said Milton of
their superlens work.
While superlensing may not be the answer for making
warships invisible, work with metamaterials looks like it may hold more
promise for large objects. A group at Duke University, led by David Smith, has
used copper-based metamaterials to create something of a cloaking cylinder.
Similar to the University of Maryland's plasmon-based
cloaking device, the Duke team's metamaterial cylinder causes microwaves to
be bent around itself rather than reflected. The cylinder has microscopic
patterns on its surface and these patterns act to redirect the waves striking
it, rather than allowing them to bounce off.
While the Duke cylinder is not perfect -- it still suffers from distortion
which can be seen in microwave images -- it does have implications for some
real applications. The devices could be used to prevent objects from causing
electromagnetic interference. For example, hiding two antennas from each other,
or cloaking an object that obstructs cell phone reception.
While the technology is not mature, Smith's group says it also has similar
implications for bending sound waves around an object. Creative uses could act
to prevent sound from escaping in a certain direction or hide an object from
echolocation technology like sonar.
We don't know how to make a $500 computer that's not a piece of junk." -- Apple CEO Steve Jobs
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