From the newsletter on the Minnesota Tesla Society


                            Invisibility Shields Planned by Engineers

In popular science fiction, the power of invisibility is readily
apparent. Star Trek fans, for example, know that the devious
Romulans could make their spaceships suddenly disappear.

But is the idea really so implausible? Not according to new findings by
scientists who say they have come up with a way to
create cloaking device.

Electronic engineers at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia
are researching a device they say could make objects
"nearly invisible to an observer." The contrivance works by preventing
light from bouncing off the surface of an object, causing
the object to appear so small it all but disappears.

The concept was reported today by the science news Web site
[EMAIL PROTECTED] It says the proposed cloaking device
would not require any peripheral attachments (such as antennas or
computer networks) and would reduce visibility no matter
what angle an object is viewed at.

Sir John Pendry, a physicist at Imperial College, London, said the
concept potentially holds several important applications "in
stealth technology and camouflage."

While types of invisibility shielding have been developed before, the
phenomenon described by Andrea Al� and Nader Engheta
sounds like something that might have been witnessed from the bridge of
science fiction's starship Enterprise.

The concept is based on a "plasmonic cover," which is a means to prevent
light from scattering. (It is light bouncing off an
object that makes it visible to an observer).

The cover would stop light from scattering by resonating at the same
frequency as the light striking it. If such a device could
cope with different wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation (including
visible light), in theory, the object would vanish into thin
air.

Al� and Engheta investigated experimental plasmonic covers that
incorporated metals, such as gold and silver, to hide visible
light.

When light strikes a metallic material, waves of electrons, called
plasmons, are generated. The engineers found that when the
frequency of the light striking the material matched the frequency of
the plasmons, the two frequencies act to cancel each other
out.

Under such conditions, the metallic object scattered only negligible
amounts of light.

The researchers' studies show that spherical and cylindrical objects
coated with plasmonic shielding material produce very little
light scattering. These objects, when hit by the right wavelength of
light, were seen to become so small that they were almost
invisible.

The study is supported by the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency, which researches and develops cutting
edge military technology.

Some experts note, however, that cloaking devices that could enable
military vehicles and aircraft, let alone spaceships, to
become completely invisible to the enemy are likely to remain elusive
for the foreseeable future.

John Pendry, the Imperial College physicist, said that light-shielding
covers would have to be customized to match the
properties of each and every object they hide.

It would be still more difficult to devise shields that could cope with
all wavelengths of the visible spectrum�from red to violet
light�and not just a single color.

Types of invisibility shielding previously proposed by scientists depend
on advanced camouflage systems, rather than objects
being made to look undetectably tiny. Such systems involve light sensors
that create a mirror image of the background scene on
the concealed object.

Source: National Geographic
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2005/02/0228_050228_invisibility.html




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