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Search results for invisibility cloaks

Bio & Medicine Apr 22, 2014

Cloaked DNA nanodevices survive pilot mission

It's a familiar trope in science fiction: In enemy territory, activate your cloaking device. And real-world viruses use similar tactics to make themselves invisible to the immune system. Now scientists at Harvard's Wyss Institute ...

Optics & Photonics Mar 31, 2014

A breakthrough in creating invisibility cloaks, stealth technology

Controlling and bending light around an object so it appears invisible to the naked eye is the theory behind fictional invisibility cloaks.

General Âé¶¹ÒùÔºics Mar 11, 2014

Research team scores a first with effective thermal camouflage

Engineers and scientists have been trying to discover the ultimate "cloaking" device – not just as a hat trick to make things invisible—but for its applications in defence technology. Now, a team from the NUS Department ...

Nanophysics Mar 3, 2014

Exciting plasmons: Researchers tackle the tiniest technology to make gadgets smaller, faster, more efficient

(Âé¶¹ÒùÔº) —University of Cincinnati researchers are discovering how to manipulate light to one day better view the world's tiniest objects through a super-lens, as well as how to hide an object in plain sight.

General Âé¶¹ÒùÔºics Feb 25, 2014

Scientists twist sound with metamaterials

A Chinese-U.S. research team is exploring the use of metamaterials—artificial materials engineered to have exotic properties not found in nature—to create devices that manipulate sound in versatile and unprecedented ways.

Engineering Feb 3, 2014

Invisibility cloak for hearing aids and implants

Microsystems are at the heart of portable hearing aids and implants. Now researchers are developing a miniature, low-power wireless microsystem to make these medical aids smaller, more comfortable and more efficient.

Nanophysics Jan 29, 2014

Array of perfect nanometer-scale spheres that can control the flow of visible light may find use in invisibility cloaks

The optical properties of a material are predominantly determined by its constituent atoms and electrons and the way that these respond to electromagnetic waves. In natural materials, the diversity of possible optical characteristics ...

Nanophysics Jan 24, 2014

Researchers develop new method to control nanoscale diamond sensors

Diamonds may be a girl's best friend, but they could also one day help us understand how the brain processes information, thanks to a new sensing technique developed at MIT.

Condensed Matter Jan 23, 2014

A new wrinkle in the control of waves: Flexible materials could provide new ways to control sound and light

Flexible, layered materials textured with nanoscale wrinkles could provide a new way of controlling the wavelengths and distribution of waves, whether of sound or light. The new method, developed by researchers at MIT, could ...

Condensed Matter Jan 10, 2014

Modeling metamaterials

EPFL scientists have developed an innovative mathematical method to greatly improve computer modeling of metamaterials.

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