Long the stuff of fantasy, practical invisibility shields have been brought a step closer to reality by researchers who say they have engineered materials that can hide an object by bending ordinary light like balloon animals at a circus.
The researchers, led by Xiang Zhang of the Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center at the University of California, Berkeley, have created two composite materials that possess negative refraction indexes, meaning they bend light opposite to the way most natural substances do. If water exhibited negative refraction, fish swimming in a pool would appear to be in the air above the water.
“This is an important step toward creating a cloak,” Zhang said Monday.
Cool! Now all we need is the Nimbus 2000 and the Marauders Map, and we’ll be almost ready to replicate the Harry Potter experience. I’m seeing a very hot Christmas gift one of these years.
But he insisted the work was not aimed at shielding Federation starships from Klingon battle cruisers. A more practical application, he said, would be to create a so-called “super lens” that could image infinitesimally small objects, enabling the manufacture of still tinier computer chips.
Oh. Well, that’s useful, too. Carry on.