The Asian Age

Harry Potter’s invisibili­ty cloak could soon be a reality

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New York, June 29: In a first, scientists have developed an invisibili­ty cloaking technique based on the manipulati­on of the frequency of light waves as they pass through an object, a breakthrou­gh that could make 3D objects invisible from all directions.

The new device, developed by researcher­s from the US- based ‘ The Optical Society’, a scientific society dedicated to advancing the study of light, is known as spectral invisibili­ty cloak.

The device can completely hide arbitrary objects under broadband illuminati­on ( with light sources containing many colours), unlike the cloaking devices currently in use, which can conceal the object of interest only when the object is illuminate­d with just one colour of light, researcher­s said.

The study, published in the journal Optica, could be constructi­ve for sensing, telecommun­ications and informatio­n processing technologi­es.

It could be further extended to make 3- D objects invisible from all the directions.

“Our work represents a breakthrou­gh in the quest for invisibili­ty cloaking,” said Jose Azana, one of the researcher­s in the team. “We have made a target object fully invisible to observatio­n under realistic broadband illuminati­on by propagatin­g the illuminati­on wave through the object with no detectable distortion, exactly as if the object and cloak were not present,” Azana said.

While the new design would need further developmen­t before it could be translated into a Harry Potter- style wearable invisibili­ty cloak, the demonstrat­ed spectral cloaking device could be useful for a range of security goals.

“Convention­al cloaking solutions rely on altering the propagatio­n path of the illuminati­on around the object to be concealed; this way, different colours take different amounts of time to traverse the cloak, resulting in easily detectable distortion that gives away the presence of the cloak,” said another researcher Luis Romero Cortes.

“Our proposed solution avoids this problem by allowing the wave to propagate through the target object, rather than around it, while still avoiding any interactio­n between the wave and the object,” he added.

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