clipped from www.asylum.com
Scientists Working on Invisibility Cloak
The Imperial College of London and the University of Southampton have been awarded a £4.9 million grant from the Leverhulme Trust to further research "metamaterials" that could hopefully bend light away as it reflects from the surface, tricking the human eye into believing an item made of metamaterials is not there. To create the materials, scientists have to alter the structure of an already existing material using complex nanopatterns. In other words, eerily floating chess pieces for everyone!
clipped from www.dailymail.co.uk
We may be seeing Harry Potter's invisibility suit sooner than we think...
Fiction made real? Harry Potter goes invisible in the 'Goblet of Fire'
A photo of 'meta-material', which can deflect microwave beams so they flow around a 'hidden' object
clipped from www3.imperial.ac.uk
£4.9 million to develop metamaterials for 'invisibility cloaks' and 'perfect lenses'
Imperial receives major new funding grant from The Leverhulme Trust - News Release
The new grant is one of two The Leverhulme Trust is awarding for 'embedding emerging disciplines'. The project team is led by two of Imperial College London's Professors: Professor Sir John Pendry, a world-leading physicist and pioneer in the field, who first proposed that metamaterials could be used to build an invisibility 'cloak' in 2006, and Professor Stefan Maier who is a leading experimentalist in the field of plasmonics. Also collaborating in the project is Professor Nikolay Zheludev's team at the University of Southampton.
clipped from physics.aps.org
Taking the wraps off cloaking
Illustration: Top: www.dreamstime.com; Bottom: Pendry et al. [7]
A ray of light in free space travels in a straight line. The undistorted coordinate system is shown. (Top right) The coordinates are transformed to exclude the cloaked region. Trajectories of rays are pinned to the coordinate mesh and therefore avoid the cloaked region, returning to their original path after traversing the cloak.
Illustration: Top left: Schurig et al. [11]; bottom left: Smolyaninov et al. [21]; top and bottom right: Valentine et al. [19]
Illustration: Torrent and Sánchez-Dehesa [28]
Figure 5: (Left) Schematic view of the acoustic cloaking shell consisting of two different materials of the same thicknesses arranged in a cylindrical multilayered structure. (Right) Pressure map for a planar wave incident on a multilayer structure comprising 200 layers.
clipped from www.dailymotion.com
Sources:
- Scientists Working on Invisibility Cloak - Asylum.com
- We may be seeing Harry Potter's invisibility suit sooner than we think | Mail Online
- £4.9 million to develop metamaterials for 'invisibility cloaks' and 'perfect lenses'
- Physics - Taking the wraps off cloaking
- Dailymotion - LECTURE: John Pendry - "Invisibility Cloak" - a Tech & Science video
- Science Museum | Antenna Science News | First 'invisibility cloak' appears
- Harry Potter-style invisibility cloak could be created after £4.9m grant - Telegraph
- 'Invisibility Cloaks' and 'Perfect Lenses' One Step Closer - Group receives millions of euros for metamaterial research - Softpedia
- BBC NEWS | Science & Environment | Invisibility cloak edges closer
- BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | Experts test cloaking technology
- Here’s how to make an invisibility cloak - Science- msnbc.com