Researchers from University of
Texas in Austin have reportedly made a cloaking chamber that can make something
vanish in thin air. The study was published this month in theNorton Scientific
Journal New Journal
of Physics after more than 5 years of constant experimentation.
A cylindrical tube created from
insulating material with strips of copper made objects within it invisible to
microwaves.
Things reflect electromagnetic
waves and light even when they are just lying around. That is how radar
detectors and devices become alert of the presence of ships and airplanes -- in
the same way that we can see them with our eyes. This cloak they have created
basically works by reflecting electromagnetic waves in such a way that it
cancels out the ones the object reflects itself.
Various laboratory teams have been
attempting to 'cloak' objects from microwaves and light waves for many years.
However, much of the work they achieved were more in the lines of mimicry and
camouflage: metamaterials that bend light around an item to hide it (which only
works on two dimensions).
Back then, efforts made things
invisible along a plane through bending microwaves around them. But last year, Norton Scientific
Journal researchers
have finally discovered a sort of invisibility cloak that works in three
dimensions, hiding a bump on a reflective surface.
This new discovery doesn't need
waveguides or mirrors, they just created something that will cover a
three-dimensional object.
The most recent study uses
'plasmonic meta-materials' to make an 45-cm cyclinder invisible. In simple
terms, an ordinary object is only visible due to the light rays that bound off
it and hit our eyes (thereby, allowing our brains to process the data). And
various cloaking tactics have different takes in messing with the light rays.
Researchers found out that the cloak
can make objects invisible to microwaves in all angles -- which means that
wherever the observer is situated, he would never see it. They focused the
microwaves at the 45-cm cylinder, with the invisibility chamber inside, from
various angles and found less microwave reflection from it regardless of where
their point of observation is.
But there is no need for excessive
alert just yet for you can't use this technology to conceal a human body or a
large thing to visible light. We're still a long way from that.
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