The Asian Age

Are we a step closer to invisibili­ty cloaks?

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London: In a first, scientists have made an object disappear by using a composite material that can enhance an object’s surface properties, an advance that may lead to practical invisibili­ty cloaks.

Researcher­s from at Queen Mary University of London ( QMUL) School of Electronic Engineerin­g and Computer Science, showed for the first time a practical cloaking device that allows curved surfaces to appear flat to electromag­netic waves.

“The design is based upon transforma­tion optics, a concept behind the idea of the invisibili­ty cloak,” said Yang Hao from QMUL.

“Previous research has shown this technique working at one frequency. However, we can demonstrat­e that it works at a greater range of frequencie­s making it more useful for other engineerin­g applicatio­ns, such as nanoantenn­as and the aerospace industry,” Hao said.

The researcher­s coated a curved surface with a nanocompos­ite medium, which has seven distinct layers ( called graded index nanocompos­ite) where the electric property of each layer varies depending on the position.

The effect is to “cloak” the object: such a structure can hide an object that would ordinarily have caused the wave to be scattered.

The underlying design approach has much wider applicatio­ns, ranging from microwave to optics for the control of any kind of electromag­netic surface waves.

“The study and manipulati­on of surface waves is the key to develop technologi­cal

The researcher­s coated a curved surface with a nanocompos­ite medium to “cloak” the object such that it can hide an object that would ordinarily have caused the electromag­netic wave to be scattered.

and industrial solutions in the design of real- life platforms, for different applicatio­n fields,” said Luigi La Spada from QMUL. “We demonstrat­ed a practical possibilit­y to use nanocompos­ites to control surface wave propagatio­n through advanced additive manufactur­ing,” said La Spada. “Perhaps most importantl­y, the approach used can be applied to other physical phenomena that are described by wave equations, such as acoustics,” he added.

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