Want China Times, Staff Reporter 2013-11-03
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The glass device makes part of a pencil disappear. (Internet photo) |
A joint
Chinese and Singaporean research team have developed an "invisibility
cloak" using polygonal devices with glass, reports China's state-run
Xinhua News Agency.
Professor
Chen Hongsheng of the Electromagnetics Academy of Zhejiang University and a research
team from Singapore's Nanyang Technological University successfully made a
goldfish and a cat disappear with the new light-bending technology.
The device
can hide objects and organisms such as a cat, and they can also move along with
the device without affecting their invisibility, said Chen.
The
invisibility cloak is created by thin panels of glass that make objects
invisible by bending light around them. The technology is still rudimentary as
it is most effective when the light comes from a single angle. The cloak can
also only make objects invisible in a narrow spectrum of light, the professor
said.
His team
along with the Singaporean University have attempted to simplify the
technology. They found human eyes are not sensitive to light's phase and minute
delay, and chose to use glass to make the device because it is transparent, has
a smooth surface, can be obtained easily and does not need to be processed with
nanotechnology.
The team
used a hexagonal device, which is most effective when light is shone directly
at six angles, while the polygonal device can only make objects invisible at
two angles. The teams published their complete research results on online
multidisciplinary journal Nature Communication last month.
Chen said
the devices can be used in the field of security, entertainment and
surveillance, adding that the research teams will continue to enhance the
devices invisibility and reduce their weight.
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