A New Design Of A Real-Life Invisibility Cloak Much Closer To Perfection

Opmmur

Time Travel Professor
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A New Design Of A Real-Life Invisibility Cloak Much Closer To Perfection
12 November, 2012
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MessageToEagle.com - Inspiration for cloaking technology has its origins in Star-Trek series and Rowling's fantasy world of Harry Potter.

In a paper published in Science in 2006, John Pendry of Imperial College London and David Schurig and David Smith of Duke University wrote that "a cloak of invisibility is in principle possible, at least over a narrow frequency band" and presented the first practical realization of such a cloak.

Their "cloaking" prototype was impressive but still not perfect as probably expected. Refining the cloaking technology continues.

Now a member of that laboratory has developed a new design that ties up one of the major loose ends from the original device.

These new findings could be important in transforming how light or other waves can be controlled or transmitted. Just as traditional wires gave way to fiber optics, the new meta-material could revolutionize the transmission of light and waves.

Because the goal of this type of research involves taming light, a new field of transformational optics has emerged.


bettercloakingduke01.jpg

This is Nathan Landy with cloaking device. Credit: Duke University Photography

The Duke team has extensive experience in creating "meta-materials," man-made objects that have properties often absent in natural ones. Structures incorporating meta-materials can be designed to guide electromagnetic waves around an object, only to have them emerge on the other side as if they had passed through an empty volume of space, thereby cloaking the object.

"In order to create the first cloaks, many approximations had to be made in order to fabricate the intricate meta-materials used in the device," said Nathan Landy, a graduate student working in the laboratory of senior investigator David R. Smith, William Bevan Professor of electrical and computer engineering at Duke's Pratt School of Engineering.

"One issue, which we were fully aware of, was loss of the waves due to reflections at the boundaries of the device," Landy said. He explained that it was much like reflections seen on clear glass. The viewer can see through the glass just fine, but at the same time the viewer is aware the glass is present due to light reflected from the surface of the glass.

"Since the goal was to demonstrate the basic principles of cloaking, we didn't worry about these reflections."

Landy has now reduced the occurrence of reflections by using a different fabrication strategy. The original cloak consisted of parallel and intersecting strips of fiberglass etched with copper.

Landy's cloak used a similar row-by-row design, but added copper strips to create a more complicated -- and better performing -- material. The strips of the device, which is about two-feet square, form a diamond-shape, with the center left empty.

When any type of wave, like light, strikes a surface, it can be either reflected or absorbed, or a combination of both. In the case of earlier cloaking experiments, a small percentage of the energy in the waves was absorbed, but not enough to affect the overall functioning of the cloak.

The cloak was naturally divided into four quadrants. Landy explained the "reflections" noted in earlier cloaks tended to occur along the edges and corners of the spaces within and around the meta-material.

bettercloakingduke02.jpg


"Each quadrant of the cloak tended to have voids, or blind spots, at their intersections and corners with each other," Landy said. "After many calculations, we thought we could correct this situation by shifting each strip so that it met its mirror image at each interface.

"We built the cloak, and it worked," he said. "It split light into two waves which traveled around an object in the center and re-emerged as the single wave with minimal loss due to reflections."

Landy said this approach could have more applications than just cloaks. For example, meta-materials can "smooth out" twists and turns in fiber optics, in essence making them seem straighter. This is important, Landy said, because each bend attenuates the wave within it.

The researchers are now working to apply the principles learned in the latest experiments to three dimensions, a much greater challenge than in a two-dimensional device.

The results of the Duke experiments - "A full-parameter unidirectional metamaterial cloak for microwaves," Nathan Landy and David R. Smith - were published online in the journal Nature Materials. Nov. 12, 2012. DOI: 10.1038/nmat3476.
 

trekie4ever

Member
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361
This is awesome but that person honestly creeps me out. Shapes of people with no distinguishing features. Just a blank canvas and the body sort of pops out of the surroundings. My first thought was Shadow people.... or at least my own experiences with them.
 

titorite

Senior Member
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1,974
I have seen this technology on youtube videos of Iraq. This tech is already in military use.
 

Einstein

Temporal Engineer
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5,413
I have seen this technology on youtube videos of Iraq. This tech is already in military use.

Yeah, I seen that video of the invisible soldier becoming visible just before he climbs into a tank. I'm inclined to believe that one was real, because we aren't seeing any followup info about it. But invisibility has been around since the Philadelphia Experiment. And there is that inventor 10 years prior publicly displaying invisibility. So I believe there is a coverup in place to keep the public unaware of this technology that's been around for about 80 years now.
 

trekie4ever

Member
Messages
361
How would this technology function in low light levels? I'm thinking like how a video camera increases its ISO which causes distortion in the image to where there just isn't enough light anymore and you get No picture. Same with this technology. Not enough light to stay invisible/bend so you get a black figure
 

Einstein

Temporal Engineer
Messages
5,413
How would this technology function in low light levels? I'm thinking like how a video camera increases its ISO which causes distortion in the image to where there just isn't enough light anymore and you get No picture. Same with this technology. Not enough light to stay invisible/bend so you get a black figure

It doesn't function with light. The light is accelerated beyond the visible spectrum. Thus making it unobservable to the human eye.
 

Opmmur

Time Travel Professor
Messages
5,049
Al Bielek on invisibility


Al Bielek describes various ways of achieving invisibility, and backs it up with photographic evidence.
 

trekie4ever

Member
Messages
361
It doesn't function with light. The light is accelerated beyond the visible spectrum. Thus making it unobservable to the human eye.

That isn't sitting well with me. Light "accelerated" makes since. I think of refraction and reverse it. A pure white beam of light has energy added to it in whatever way. However the problem imagining is like this:

Observer 1---->\(accelerated)cloak(accelerated)/<-----observer 2.

The cloaked persons suit accelerates all light it comes in contact with so nothing in a direct line of the observer can be seen as well as that light too is hitting the cloak and being accelerated. A black spot comes into my mind. Accelerating (increasing/decreasing frequency) doesn't make sense unless the device also emits light to deceive the observer. Then its more like camouflage.
 

Einstein

Temporal Engineer
Messages
5,413
It doesn't function with light. The light is accelerated beyond the visible spectrum. Thus making it unobservable to the human eye.

That isn't sitting well with me. Light "accelerated" makes since. I think of refraction and reverse it. A pure white beam of light has energy added to it in whatever way. However the problem imagining is like this:

Observer 1---->\(accelerated)cloak(accelerated)/<-----observer 2.

The cloaked persons suit accelerates all light it comes in contact with so nothing in a direct line of the observer can be seen as well as that light too is hitting the cloak and being accelerated. A black spot comes into my mind. Accelerating (increasing/decreasing frequency) doesn't make sense unless the device also emits light to deceive the observer. Then its more like camouflage.

Not necessarily. There appears to be an alteration in the flow of time contributing to the accelerated light. And from what we are seeing, light seems to pass right through the accelerated light location. Just because it doesn't work according to the rules we are familiar with, shouldn't keep us from looking at the process objectively.
 

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