Cloaking Device

FreeAsia2000

Junior Member
Well finally a cloaking device may be on the cards...stealth has just
been given a shot in the arm

Now you see it, now you don't: cloaking device is not just sci-fi

Ian Sample, science correspondent
Wednesday May 3, 2006
The Guardian

It's been the curse of the USS Enterprise and the Klingons' favoured weapon. But back on Earth, mathematicians claim to have worked out how to make a cloaking device to render objects invisible.

An outline for the device is described in a scientific paper published today in which the authors reveal how objects placed close to a material called a superlens appear to vanish.

Even in the world of science fiction, the technology is not perfect, and nor is the device proposed by Graeme Milton at Utah University and Nicolae-Alexandru Nicorovici at Sydney University of Technology. According to their calculations, the device would only work at certain frequencies of light, and only if the object is within close range of the superlens.

The cloaking device relies on recently discovered materials used to make superlenses that make light behave in a highly unusual way. Instead of having a positive refractive index - the property which makes light bend as it passes through a prism or water - the materials have a negative refractive index, which effectively makes light travel backwards. It's light, but not as we know it.

Prof Milton's team calculated that when certain objects are placed next to superlenses, the light bouncing off them is essentially erased by light reflecting off the superlens, making the object invisible.

The calculations show that while the device could be used to obscure almost any shape of object, it only works over a short range of wavelengths, so if used to hide objects from human vision, they might only partially disappear.

Sir John Pendry, a theoretical physicist at Imperial College London who invented superlenses, said: "Effectively, they are making a piece of space seem to disappear, at least as far as light is concerned."

The research appears in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society today.

Prof Pendry said the technology has great potential for hiding objects from radar or cloaking electronic instruments so they can be used in strong electromagnetic fields, such as those produced by hospital MRI brain scanners. "The secret is having the cloak itself be invisible and if you can do that cheaply and efficiently and it doesn't need to be metres thick, it would be extremely valuable for stealth. Even if you could cloak a single frequency, it would be very useful. The military is extremely interested in this."

So far the researchers have only worked through the mathematics to prove that the device is plausible. The practicalities of making one have yet to be solved.

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Kampfwagen

Junior Member
Ah, I have heard about this sort of device before. I think it has some signifigant problems to overcome, though.

1. How does one make a plane or land craft out of this substance? Or, alternatively, cover it efficently?

2. If one makes a solider uniform out of this stuff, how exactly would that work? One would need to make it indipendent of the superlense, make the superlense transportable, or keep it to strict defense pourpouses.

3. Again, if one were to make such equipment for the solider, how does one make the weapons and gear of the solider invisible as well?

Also, I was sort of wondering if Light Refraction Technology (Creating a feild where light bounces off of the subject at various angles to create a predator-esque cloak?)
 

The_Zergling

Junior Member
Hmm. From the description I would we led to believe that the cloaking effect is generally visual, so far I can't understand how it would be effective against radar...

Seems somewhat similiar to the 007 concept where there'd be little cameras, constantly taking pictures of the background and then projecting them on little screens all over the surface. Pretty hard to do, not not technically impossible, I'd think.

Visually it's pretty effective, but against radar it's no good because you're still there, you've just got a new skin.
 

planeman

Senior Member
VIP Professional
Is this technology the same as "plasma stealth" which allegedly the Russians have developed?

stealth.jpg

Sorry, couldn't resist.
 
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DPRKUnderground

Junior Member
Didn't a Japanese professor come up with a sort of cloaking device. It didn't go over the entire body, but wasn't that bad. I think she had a camera in the back that would project on the front so it would seem like you were partially invisible.
 

Kampfwagen

Junior Member
Yeah, it was a guy scientist. I think this is the same sort of design, but with some expansions placed upon it.
 

walter

Junior Member
here's a picture of the Japanese 'invisible cloak':

_38840545_coat_ap300.jpg


And from reading the article Freeasia posted it doesn't sound to me that superlenses have anything to do with the Japanese invention, nor does it have anything to do with plasma as far as i can tell. It will be a long time before any practicle application can be made from these laboratory tests.
 

The_Zergling

Junior Member
From what I've seen so far, my opinion remains unchanged that it's only visual camo, and won't make any difference against sonar or radar or infrared or... you get the point.

Useful for urban combat between troops I suppose, as long as they're not using infrared goggles.
 
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