Scientists Invent "Cloak of Invisibility"

Increasingly science fiction is losing its fiction. I think we already have devices better than Star Trek communicators (on Star Trek they didn't have cool games and ring tones, now did they!). Now it seems scientists have developed a "cloak of invisibility," albeit an imperfect one. Just 5 months after figuring out the theory that would make such a device possible, a team of Romulan British and American scientists have invented a device that can hide an object from detection using some kinds of light. And they believe the technology can be perfected to make objects invisible to visible light. From Salon.com:

A team of American and British researchers has made a Cloak of Invisibility. Well, OK, it's not perfect. Yet. But it's a start, and it did a pretty good job of hiding a copper cylinder.

In this experiment the scientists used microwaves to try and detect the cylinder. Like light and radar waves, microwaves bounce off objects making them visible and creating a shadow, though it has to be detected with instruments.

If you can hide something from microwaves, you can hide it from radar -- a possibility that will fascinate the military...

The new work points the way for an improved version that could hide people and objects from visible light...

The first working cloak was in only two dimensions and did cast a small shadow, Smith acknowledged. The next step is to go for three dimensions and to eliminate any shadow.

Viewers can see things because objects scatter the light that strikes them, reflecting some of it back to the eye.

"The cloak reduces both an object's reflection and its shadow, either of which would enable its detection," said Smith.

In effect the device, made of metamaterials -- engineered mixtures of metal and circuit board materials, which could include ceramic, Teflon or fiber composite materials -- channels the microwaves around the object being hidden.

When water flows around a rock, Smith explained, the water recombines after it passes the rock and people looking at the water downstream would never know it had passed a rock...

Looking at a cloaked item, Smith explained: "One would see whatever is behind the cloak. That is, the cloak is, ideally, transparent. Since we do not have a perfect cloak at this point, there is some reflection and some shadow, meaning that the background would still be visible just darkened somewhat.

I bet Dick Cheney is salivating over this one!


mole333's picture

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JJ Ross's picture

You Might Get a Kick Out Of It

I blogged the invisibility cloak power of story here, combining it with news of JK Rowling's first official dinosaur dubbing --hey, could there be a Cheney-saurus in our future, or maybe a Tyrannosaurus Rove?
Laughing out loud


mole333's picture

Heh!

Well, Gary Larson has a species named after him...a louse, I think.

There is a show on the science channel that talks about how Star Trek has affected the world...and many inventions really did have behind them a nerdy trekkie who was inspired by the series. When I heard about the cloak of invisibility I didn't think about Harry Potter (which I never really got into, finding it way too trite and derivative, though better than a lot that is out there) but I thought of the Romulan cloaking device.

Science is cool...I may be a nerd, but I think science really is super cool.


JJ Ross's picture

I saw that show!

Harry Potter's cloak of invisibility figures into several of the stories, which I love, it's true, but I admit the FIRST thing I thought of upon hearing this nerdy science news, was my old mentor in the public school system. His personal stories often ended up with people in bars under the influence, who would reach the critical danger point of, as he put it with great glee, feeling invisible -- this always happened right before the happy vanisher got his comeuppance. Smiling


mole333's picture

Drunken invisible...

The drunken invisibility stories remind me of my year working in Japan. The Japanese LOVE to drink, even those who can't handle alcohol. One grad student would drink to excess whenever we went out drinking...and each and every time there would come a point where his pants came off. Even in the dead of winter with snow on the ground, his pants came off.

I think the alcohol-induced invisibility might also only work in the microwave range and not visible light range.


JJ Ross's picture

Or else

he figured that HE was invisible but his pants were not, like the Invisible Man used to wrap himself in bandages to be seen and then shed 'em to be invisible again?

Scientific precedent!


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