Scientists Make Item Invisible to Microwaves 219
Vicissidude writes "A team of American and British researchers has made a cloak of invisibility. In their experiment the scientists used microwaves to try and detect a copper cylinder. Like light and radar waves, microwaves bounce off objects making them visible and creating a shadow, though it has to be detected with instruments. If you can hide something from microwaves, you can hide it from radar and visible light. In effect the device, made of metamaterials — engineered mixtures of metal and circuit board materials, which could include ceramic, Teflon or fiber composite materials — channels the microwaves around the object being hidden. When water flows around a rock, co-author David R. Smith explained, the water recombines after it passes the rock and people looking at the water downstream would never know it had passed a rock. The first working cloak was in only two dimensions and did cast a small shadow, Smith acknowledged. The next step is to go for three dimensions and to eliminate any shadow."
I know a recently-shampooed poodle (Score:5, Funny)
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Why should Harry Potter have all the fun? (Score:2, Funny)
How long do you think till you can pick up a Cloak of Invisiblity at your local MegaMart?
Quite some time. (Score:3, Interesting)
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How long till we see military issue suits? They wouldn't have to be perfect to be a big help to infantry in medium cover terrain.
Of course, almost anything military gets a civilian version eventually, so we're back where I started.
Re:Quite some time. (Score:5, Interesting)
Sure, they won't get them right away. But you better believe that they'll try to capture them, and any state sponsors that they have immediately try and produce or otherwise acquire them. Big armies, trying to cloak things like tanks driving down the stret, will have a much harder job at it than fighters simply hiding themselves and their RPG, already in the shadows or buildings. Not to mention things like pressure or vibration-triggered mines/IEDs won't be affected, which also benefits guerilla fighters on their own turf.
Re:Quite some time. (Score:5, Insightful)
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This assumes, of course, that the criminal element (or anyone else for that matter) will be able to use the cloaks successfully. Think about how hard it would be to rob a bank. If you're wearing the cloak then how does the teller know that you're there demanding money? Perhaps you just want to cloak the getaway car. How do you find it back when you're done with the job? Even if you remembered where
Re:Quite some time. (Score:4, Insightful)
Even if there was no "on-off" button on this, it would be trivially easy to "make" one. Paint water colors on all or part of the object that you can wash off. Tape on visible objects. Put a cover over it. Etc. This assumes that the cloak *itself* isn't flexible, allowing you to take that on or off.
Also, I doubt it'll be perfect invisibility. Even if, to the naked eye it appears perfect, I doubt it would to custom goggles analyzing the scene. Surely there are some wavelengths that it won't work on (from the sound of it, you need to customize a layer of this for a *specific* wavelength). Or the polarity could be thrown off. Or all sorts of other things.
Re:Quite some time. (Score:5, Insightful)
If it's diverting all the light around you, there's no light to get in and hit your eye so you can see.
The solution would be much more complex than the basic cloak. You'd have to let some light in, but make sure it didn't get back out again. I can see that being problimatic.
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Not only that (Score:3, Insightful)
So this technology would be most useful for hiding static vehicles/persons, or perhaps even moreso for hiding buildings (think, a whole, semi-invisible bunker).
I wonder how it would affect sound waves as well. Perhaps sonar would pick up things that
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This would be devastating to the cloaking effect if the same wavelengths were let in that you were trying to cloak against. Your cloak would make the area it covers darker by not passing all light.
If you were trying to cloak against visible, you would have to use microwave or something else to look at things with to avoid this.
Re:Quite some time. (Score:5, Funny)
Use your feelings, you must
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Re:Why should Harry Potter have all the fun? (Score:5, Informative)
Negative Index of refraction Materials (NIMs), metamaterials, or whatever you want to call them, are relatively easy to make in the microwave region, since the wavelengths are on the order of centimeters. Thus, using a special arrangement of rings, loops, and wires, you can craft a lattice-like material that exhibits negative refraction. Technically, it has a negative magnetic permeability (mu) and negative permittivity (epsilon).
This has all kinds of weird implications. The group velocity is still in the forward direction, but the phase velocity goes in reverse. Evanescent waves propogate, not die off. Perfect lenses can be made. Measurements LESS than the wavelength of light can be taken. There was a list of implications in the August issue of Scientific American, I believe.
Anyhow, this works great at the ~cm scale. Visible light is hard as hell: the scale there is on the order of nanometers. And the copper or silver or tungsten wires used to make the metamaterials have MISERABLE magnetic losses at these small scales, so mu is no longer negative. The energy no longer propagates in the medium. As of three years ago, there were no promising candidates for solving this problem. There was an outside hack at using carbon nanotubes -- which may or may not maintain their permeability down to small scales -- but it was a long shot at best. Arranging the little guys would have been devilishly difficult.
Glad to see that Pendry, who's been in this field almost as long as Veselago, is still making good strides. Even if they can't get to the visible wavelength, NIM's have spectacular applications for microwave antennae.
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As an optics tool... (Score:2)
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How long do you think till you can pick up a Cloak of Invisiblity at your local MegaMart?
Maybe you can already, but I've never seen one myself.
hmm, (Score:4, Funny)
Other than that if they make something invisable from visable light then it wouldn't be able to see anything, so a person would be blind or a bot would be virtually impossible to navigate, because you couldn't see it or track it...
Still, very interesting idea.
Just talking... (Score:2, Interesting)
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sigh (Score:2)
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Interesting story -- one time in German class, we encountered the word "unsichtbar" (roughly, "unsightable"), and I was called upon to guess what it means. I guessed, incorrectly, "blind". (which oddly enough is also spelled "blind" in German.) The teacher then said that no, it
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Exactly. 10, 20, 30 years from now we may have the processing power and precise enough monitoring equipment to look at a river and say if there is a rock a mile upstream or not.
I think the point is to make the item not necessarily invisible but blend it in with the background noise to the poi
Moo (Score:4, Insightful)
This title is absurd. Invisibilty?
The research is very kewl though, and i hope it progresses. But why not lay off the stupid titles, and produce results based on kewlness or usefulness, instead of what can be termed with a popular buzzword. Information Technology is bad enough from its buzzword infusion. Must we destroy legitamte research/discoveries as well?
Re:Moo (Score:5, Funny)
*Ring* Hello?
Hi, this is the Pot calling. Is the Kettle in?
Yay for TV Dinners (Score:5, Funny)
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You know you are a fat geek when... (Score:4, Funny)
the first thing that came to your mind when reading this summary was:
"Oh cool, no more burnt and undercooked mini-pizzas!"
I really should go outside more often.
To boldly go .. (Score:2)
They may be onto something.
Bah! (Score:5, Funny)
Oh, wait. Never mind!
Picture here! (Score:3, Funny)
Amazing stuff.
Re:Picture here! (Score:5, Funny)
Obvious? (Score:2)
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perhaps not but... (Score:2)
TERRIBLE NEWS! (Score:3, Funny)
Color me dubious (Score:2, Insightful)
You might be able to channel some energy around an object, but:
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combine that with this and you've got even better camouflage and they'll notice you even less often.
I have a perfect cloaking material right here... (Score:2, Funny)
Only funny thing about it is.... I can't find it.
I bet if I could find it though, I'd win the Nobel prize.
meta-materials (Score:5, Informative)
I don't think this follows, at least when we're talking about metamaterials [wikipedia.org]. So far no one has invented metamaterials for optical wavelengths, as metamaterials rely on complex structure that's somewhat wavelength specific. It's easier to play "fool the photon" with microwaves (because of the longer wavelength) or X-rays (because of the higher energy) than it is with visible light. (Xiang Zhang's experiments in extending near-field effects of visible light are a very different mechanism, and are lumpedin with metamaterials simply for lack of a better term.)
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Was Anyone Else Thinking... (Score:4, Funny)
Sorry, grew up on waaaay too much startrek
Re:Was Anyone Else Thinking... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Was Anyone Else Thinking... (Score:5, Funny)
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Don't the Klingon Warbird's all have cloaking as well? Or is that all after TOS? I seem to remember several episodes where Klingon battle cruisers de-cloaked at (in)opportune moments.
Cheers
"In effect the device, made of metamaterials..." (Score:2, Funny)
Has anyone seen David Smith? I searched the lab... (Score:3, Funny)
Backpack of Invisibility? (Score:5, Interesting)
Could a "gravity cloak" create subspaces operating as independent universes? Could we contain matter too highly interactive for current use safely? Like a tiny black hole conveniently near a device it's powering, or a pair coupled into a wormhole for "faster than light" travel through custom-folded space? Vast amounts of stuff crammed into pocketsized spaces.
Maybe the old playground philosphers choosing between "teleportation or invisibility superpowers" will finally have a lab to figure out which is really better.
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or maybe I can finally go around carrying tons of cash (if I had any), a saint-bernard, 3 drinks, a fishing pole, a monkey, a shovel, and loads of pirate-wannabe stuff? excellent!
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It's already been done. But you don't even have to cloak gravitons. What do you think all that dark matter is? It's intersolar sprawl, and the aliens use the cloaking so that we don't keep bothering them, asking for technology.
Stealth Ship (Score:5, Insightful)
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Microwaves? That's nothing! (Score:2)
Wake me up when scientists can do *that*.
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Already done. Scientests have been invisible to human women long before slashdot was even conceived
I have a cheaper way to do this (Score:3, Funny)
Sneaky little buggers, always watching you and beeping at you to take your dinner or coffee out
Comment removed (Score:3, Interesting)
What about radiation from the object? (Score:2, Insightful)
Do some spectranalysis, and you immediately know something fishy is going on. (Copper won't radiate like the ground, for example)
Watch out for that "next step," it's a doozy. (Score:2)
Right, and my "overunity" (perpetual motion) device has an calculated energy output equal to 100.1% of its input. But due to a few minor engineering losses that reduce the output, the current working model only produces 99.9% of the input.
The next step is to go for that last 0.2%. I did this work very quickly
Co-author with last name "Smith" - is he a Doctor? (Score:2)
Actual invisibility is useless (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Actual invisibility is useless (Score:5, Insightful)
The failure of moderation (Score:3, Informative)
And, folks, here's a case indicating the limits of moderation by the unwashed masses. A pinhole camera [wikipedia.org] is the very oldest type of camera. Having no lens, it can be made with a box and (gasp!) a nail. It is known to have been known about by the Chinese somewhere in the 5th century B.C, and Aristotle in 4th century B.C. [photo.net] Oh, how a small bit of research in widely available knowledge could have saved the parent poster from looking like
Whooooosh! (Score:3, Funny)
Article From May (Score:2)
the wires posted this one recently, but the science article came out in May. Old news?
It's the first time we _know_ it's been done (Score:2)
After all, the F-117 first flew in 1977 - it's 30 year old technology. I bet they've not been sitting on their hands since then.
WTF (Score:2)
Zonk's title is actually more accurate than the original !
hehe, sounds interesting but a bit overhyped. Seems like a long way from a 2-dimensional version to 3. I am not even sure what one would see using 2 dimensional version, how do you hide 2 of 3?? Would not that leave only a line, but with no width you can't see the line, but then it would be complete but its not so.....
Pictures (Score:2)
finally! (Score:2, Funny)
I'll be able to heat up my Chef Boy-R-Dee without taking it out of the can!
A Cloaking Device? (Score:2, Funny)
They're making this WAAAAAAAAY too complicated. (Score:5, Funny)
Research has been delayed (Score:2)
A visible light version already exists... (Score:2)
There's a photo of it here [lowes.com]. It's sitting there in the middle of the table (actually, just a little to the left of the middle).
Seriously though, how funny would that demo be... "I've created this material lattice that re-directs visible light such that nobody can ever see it ! oh wait, I had it here somewhere... D'oh !"
Basically, neat trick for radar/MW, lousy for visible light. Why even go there ?
The big limitation (Score:2)
You can use lots of different frequencies for radar. This is so cool it must have lots of uses but a cloaking device doesn't seem to be among them.
Vulcan-level tech? (Score:2)
"from the on-our-way-to-vulcan-level-tech dept."
Goodness, Zonk, don't you know anything?! The Vulcans didn't use cloaking devices; the Romulans and Klingons did (as well as some rogue Federation types)! I was about to say "your geek license has been revoked", but decided against it. Thanks for posting the link to this article.
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Water doesn't reflect off objects? (Score:2)
Is that even true? It seems to me that the flow pattern of two identical channels, one with a rock and one without, would differ in a way that would be detectable downstream -- at least if you knew what it was supposed to look like without a rock.
Say goodbye to airport security (Score:2)
Wrap a gun in it, put in carry on bags.
Pass right on through the machine, nothing noticed.
Two words (Score:2)
Repost? (Score:2)
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Pasisve radar (Score:2)
Briefly, a passive radar system will monitor the background radar/microwave "noise" that gets emitted by hot objects, radio masts and the like. If they detect a lack of signal in a specific area, then logically that means something is deflecting or absorbing the microwaves.
Well, I have to say (Score:2)
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Re:bad analogy (Score:4, Insightful)
Fermat's principle (Score:4, Informative)
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Grammar Nazi (Score:2, Funny)