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PC Magazine November 15, 2006 |
Bits & Bites v25n22 Researchers have produced an "invisibility cloak" that works at a specific frequency. |
Chemistry World October 19, 2006 Simon Hadlington |
Invisibility Cloak is Latest Amazing `Metamaterial' Chemists beware -- the metamaterialists are making startling progress. The latest structure composed of a metamaterial is a remarkable cloaking device that can render an object invisible to microwave radiation -- in two dimensions at least. |
Chemistry World May 26, 2006 Katharine Sanderson |
The Invisible Man Made Real Cloaks that make objects invisible will be made within 18 months, say scientists. Changes to sub-wavelength structural details, rather than the chemical composition of these materials, will make objects disappear before our eyes, claims the team. |
Popular Mechanics August 12, 2008 Daniel H. Wilson |
Why Invisible Men Aren't as Close as You Think ... Yet Invisibility, this week's peer-reviewed hype would have you believe, isn't just for pre-pubescent boy wizards anymore. But I wouldn't start sewing your Harry Potter-style magic cloak just yet, geeks and geekettes. |
AskMen.com |
Superhero Tech Researchers at Germany's Karlsruhe Institute of Technology report they were able to cloak a tiny bump in a layer of gold, preventing its detection at nearly visible infrared frequencies. |
IEEE Spectrum August 2008 Neil Savage |
Metamaterials Breakthrough Brings Invisibility Closer Negative refraction of visible light is a step toward invisibility. |
Wired August 2003 Wil McCarthy |
Being Invisible Next-gen optical camouflage is busting out of defense labs and into the street. This is technology you have to see to believe. |
Popular Mechanics September 2009 |
5 Metamaterials That Make Matter Invisible, Silent or Blindingly Fast When nature can't supply raw ingredients for next-generation hardware, scientists create their own. |
PC Magazine May 2, 2007 John Brandon |
Future Watch: An Invisibility Suit Science is finally catching up with science fiction. |
BusinessWeek June 14, 2004 Rachel Tiplady |
Take That, You Creepy Dementors Gizmos straight out of Harry Potter are coming to market. Got a spare $500,000 for a flying car? Scientists the world over are perfecting inventions that could make the magic created by British author J.K. Rowling part of everyday life. |