Military contractors have actually been working on something like this for a 
little while now, but using a simpler model of optical receptor/repeater using 
fiber optics for transmission.  They think the effect at its best would be much 
like what you saw in the movie Predator.  Nothing to show off just yet; so far 
it's just proof-of-concept stuff.

Many years ago I theorized what I called "Microisoluminescence."  Back before 
WWII the Allies figured out that it was possible to roughly camouflage aircraft 
by placing headlights on the leading edges of wings, so that when they 
divebombed the enemy, the light values of the aircraft and the surrounding 
bright sky were close to one another.  They called this "Isoluminescence," and 
it was really crude but it worked pretty well.  Sounds about as weird as what 
we did painting highly visible black and white angled lines on ships at sea to 
lessen their visibility, but that worked, too.

My idea was to forego the complexities of actual image transmission in favor of 
simply varying the face of an object using light values roughly similar to (and 
slightly amplified above) the light values on the opposite face of the object, 
and to implement them in a rather fine-grained fashion, say a half-inch grid of 
transmitters -- hence the "Micro."  

At first it sounds crazy, like you'd be able to see a thing cloaked like that 
coming a mile away, but it turns out that isoluminescence can fool the eye a 
lot more than you might think.  Oncoming cars on a gray rainy day are a lot 
harder to see when they have their lights off.  Simply making an object's light 
values roughly the same as its surroundings can go a long way toward making you 
miss it until it's right up on you.
Respectfully,

Adam Phillip Churvis
Certified Advanced ColdFusion MX 7 Developer
BlueDragon Alliance Founding Committee



Get advanced intensive Master-level training in
C# & ASP.NET 2.0 for ColdFusion Developers at
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  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Dana Tierney 
  To: CF-Community 
  Sent: Saturday, May 27, 2006 8:54 PM
  Subject: I want one


  Harry Potter's Invisibility Cloak Is Possible, Studies Say 
  May 26 (Bloomberg) -- The creation of an invisibility cloak like the one used 
by Harry Potter in J.K. Rowling's books is theoretically possible, scientists 
said in two studies published by the online Science Express journal. 

  The key to making an object invisible is to surround it with a cloak made of 
``metamaterials'' that are engineered to bend light around an object, 
continuing on the other side in the same direction as before, Ulf Leonhardt, 
author of one of the studies, said in a telephone interview. Sound waves, which 
have a longer wavelength than light, can be distorted in such a way, and light 
bends naturally in mirages, for instance, he said. 

  ``All one has to do is enhance this bending effect and control it better,'' 
said Leonhardt, Professor of theoretical physics at the University of St. 
Andrews in Scotland. ``We've given recipes of how to do this. You have to 
control structures that are smaller than the wavelength of light -- less than 
half a micrometer,'' he said. A micrometer is a millionth of a meter. 

  The authors of the papers set out mathematical requirements for a theoretical 
metamaterial, that could achieve invisibility. Applications include protecting 
structures from vibrations, sound and seismic waves, improving wireless 
communications, seeing through obstructions, and hiding objects, David Schurig, 
a scientist at Duke University, North Carolina, and co-author of the second 
paper, said in a statement. 

  ``The cloak would act like you've opened up a hole in space,'' another 
co-author, David Smith, professor of electrical and computer engineering at 
Duke, said in the statement. ``All light or other electromagnetic waves are 
swept around the area, guided by the metamaterial to emerge on the other side 
as if they had passed through an empty volume of space.'' 

  `Broadband Cloak' 

  The cloaking device posited by the Duke scientists and the paper's third 
co-author, Professor John Pendry at Imperial College London, would cover the 
entire light spectrum and other lines of force, such as magnetic fields, 
Imperial said in an online statement. 

  ``Ours would be a broadband cloak,'' Pendry said in the statement. ``There 
would be no communication between the object that is cloaked and the outside 
world.'' 

  Translating the math into a metamaterial that works isn't easy, Leonhardt 
said, describing his proposal as more ``modest'' than Pendry's. 

  ``If you relax the requirement of perfection in the invisibility, we can have 
much more modest requirements of the material,'' he said. ``If you're happy 
with a slight haze, or even things you can't really perceive with the naked 
eye, but you can with instruments,'' then it's easier to make, he said. 

  `Spacewarp' 

  The two Duke scientists are now working on building the proposed material, 
and the first device would be a few millimeters across, according to Imperial 
College. When built, a final theoretical device would have just the same 
effects as the magical cloak in J.K. Rowling's books, the British school said. 

  ``Just as in the Harry Potter film, nobody would be able to see an object if 
it was cloaked, as it's in a spacewarp, and that's exactly what our stuff would 
do,'' Pendry said. 

  The two papers, ``Controlling Electromagnetic Fields'' by Pendry, Schurig and 
Smith, and ``Optical Conformal Mapping,'' by Leonhardt, were published 
yesterday by Science Express, the online advance publication of the journal 
Science. The Duke/Imperial research was supported by the U.S. Defense Advanced 
Research Projects Agency. 
   


  To contact the reporter on this story:
  Alex Morales in London at  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Last Updated: May 26, 2006 08:11 EDT  

  http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000082&sid=a5w0Bet0kOE4&refer=canada

  

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