Back in 2006 Harry Potter was all the rage in the engineering world. That year a team at Duke University built the first rudimentary device for hiding objects,
akin to the boy wizard’s invisibility cloak. But in technology as in
the movies, Harry Potter is now old news. Over the past six years,
scientists have moved beyond mere invisibility: If they could build
cloaks for light waves, then why not design materials to conceal sound
and even ocean waves?
A whole suite of invisibility cloaks are now under development, all
building on the same basic principle as the first prototype. When we
perceive an object, we are actually detecting the disturbances it
creates as energy waves bounce off it. The Duke cloak, constructed from a
synthetic structure called a metamaterial, prevented those disturbances
by bending light waves around the object, allowing them to continue
flowing like water in a stream around a rock (concept shown at right).
Sure enough, that technology is not limited to light. In the latest
designs it is being applied to mask all kinds of other waves, with the
potential for zeroing out sound pollution and protecting cities from
earthquakes. Meanwhile, scientists continue to pursue the original
invisibility concept—work that is sparking a lot of interest in military
surveillance circles.
The Tech: A group of physicists led by Tolga Ergin and Joachim Fischer at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology in Germany built a light-bending fabric last year that—for the first time—rendered a cloaked object invisible to the human eye from any viewing angle.
What It's Made of:
A rigid synthetic polymer
composed of tiny rods spaced about 350 nanometers (billionths of a
meter) apart, a gap small enough to manipulate waves of visible light.
How it Works:
As a test, researchers laid the cloak
over a flat surface with a small bump in the middle. The cloak bent
incoming light rays around the bump and bounced them back as if they had
struck a flat surface. Observers would never know the bump existed.
For now, this cloak can hide only small imperfections on flat surfaces. But eventually, scientists hope to scale it up to conceal much larger objects anywhere in space. The U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (Darpa) started investing in metamaterials way back in 2001, and while it doesn’t like to reveal specific intentions, the agency would certainly be interested in cloaks that conceal soldiers and military equipment.
Source: http://discovermagazine.com/2012/jul-aug/06-how-to-make-anything-disappear/article_view?b_start:int=0&-C=
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