OK, This Is Just Cool
Invisibility Cloaks, here we come:
Researchers at the University of California in Berkeley have developed a material that can bend light around 3D objects making them “disappear”.
The materials do not occur naturally but have been created on a nano scale, measured in billionths of a metre.
The team says the principles could one day be scaled up to make invisibility cloaks large enough to hide people.
Stealth operations
The findings, by scientists led by Xiang Zhang, were published in the journals Nature and Science.
The light-bending effect relies on reversing refraction, the effect that makes a straw placed in water appear bent.
Previous efforts have shown this negative refraction effect using microwaves—a wavelength far longer than humans can see.
[snip]
Light is neither absorbed nor reflected by the objects, passing “like water flowing around a rock,” according to the researchers. As a result, only the light from behind the objects can be seen.
Filed under: Geek Stuff













Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.
—Arthur C. Clarke