This Invisibility Cloak Is Powerful Enough To Hide Keys And Other Small Objects
Yes, people have made invisibility cloaks
before. So far, though, all we’ve seen are minuscule versions that only work
with very, very tiny objects. A significant stride appears to have been made,
however, as a group of researchers managed to create a scaled-up version that
can cloak still-small-but-relatively-larger objects like keys and tiny pet
lizards.
Created by a team
from the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), it’s the first invisibility
cloak that can hide objects big enough to make them viable for classroom
demonstrations, since they don’t require specialized equipment (such as lenses,
as we've seen in other projects like the Rochester Cloak) in order
to work. Like other previous invisibility cloaks, the new one diverts light
around an object to shield it from detection; unlike them, it uses
modifications that enable the ability to hide larger items.
Compensating for the
increased distance the light will travel has been the fundamental challenge for
any invisibility cloak. In the KIT team’s version, they developed a
silicon-based organic polymer that’s mixed with titanium dioxide nanoparticles,
which scatters the light waves and slows down their propagation. This light is
then restored to normal speed later to make up for the longer path, creating
the optical illusion. In the new system, the team will place an object they
want to cloak inside a hollow metal cylinder that’s coated with acrylic paint,
which is then embedded inside the team’s light-scattering polymer.
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