New technique proposed to make objects invisible

New technique to make objects invisible proposed
Interaction of light with a hollow sphere of silicon (A) and with the same sphere filled with a potion composed of three different strata (B). Credit: UEx

In recent years, invisibility has become an area of increasing research interest due to advances in materials engineering. This research work by the UEx, which has been published in Scientific Reports, explored the electromagnetic properties of specific materials that can make certain objects invisible when they are introduced into its interior. Normally, artificial materials known as metamaterials, or materials with high dielectric or magnetic constants, are used

This idea for attaining invisibility using filler materials instead of external layers was inspired by the final-year project of Alberto Serna and Luis Molina, undergraduate students of telecommunications at the UEx. Serna says, "The majority of the techniques with which cloaks of invisibility are developed harness the extraordinary properties of certain materials to make light circumvent the object to be made ." Nevertheless, this model cannot be implemented using fillers, because the object is exposed to the light and therefore forced to interact with it. "We have used a different technique, plasmonic cloaking, which makes the object and the filler jointly invisible," says Serna from Italy, where he is currently on a research stay.

The method makes it possible to achieve invisibility from the interior of an object without using any external device. In addition, invisibility using fillers allows the object to interact with its environment without being hampered by the external cloaking. The technique is valid for objects of small size, and the bandwidths achieved are still narrow, but the investigators believe the scope for further improvements is promising.

Luis Landesa, who led this work, contends that the idea of fillers opens up a new array of applications. "The fact that an object can see the outside without hindrance from external layers is novel and promising," he says. The researchers suggest applications that range from using non-solid to uses in communications and bioengineering. A typical example of the utility of invisibility is in invisible microscopic probes that do not perturb the device to be measured; with the use of fillers, in addition, the reading itself would not be altered, this being the problem posed by invisibility cloaks.

More information: Alberto Serna et al, Multilayer homogeneous dielectric filler for electromagnetic invisibility, Scientific Reports (2018). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-32070-5

Journal information: Scientific Reports

Provided by University of Extremadura

Citation: New technique proposed to make objects invisible (2018, November 27) retrieved 19 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2018-11-technique-invisible.html
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