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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: invisibility cloak + clark school + researchers  Related to the article below (Last Update: 5/13/2008)


Printed Electronics World (press release)
Printing the cloak of invisibility
Printed Electronics World (press release), UK - Apr 29, 2008
Physicists no longer say that the invisibility cloak of Harry Potter, the vanishing car of James Bond or the Invisible Man are an impossibility. ...

Gizmodo.com
Japanese Men Perfect the Cloak of Invisibility Much to Japanese ...
Gizmodo.com - Apr 18, 2008
... either reflect no light or have a perfect focal point?the end result of which lets you create a perfect invisibility cloak to skulk around Tokyo with. ...
When the best in the West fail to get it right
Bangkok Post, Thailand -
The real problem was not the alleged invisibility cloak, but inaccurate reporting born of frustration with lack of access to key events on the Square in the ...

Wired News
Cloak of Light Makes Drone Invisible?
Wired News - May 9, 2008
The latest incarnation can be seen (no pun intended) in a report at FlightGlobal, "Electroluminescence is key to invisibility. ...
Boffins draw up plans for perfect invisibility
TechRadar.com, UK - Apr 21, 2008
Naturally, the researchers are drawing attention to their intriguing work by talking, in layman's terms, about an invisibility cloak, but we prefer the ...
Harry Potter 20Q
ACED Magazine, FL - Apr 29, 2008
It???s so smart it???ll see through your Invisibility Cloak. It will taunt you with its amusing banter and poke fun at you when you lose. ...
'Cloak of Invisibility' Realized in Theory
Tech-On English, Japan - Apr 18, 2008
A coauthored paper titled "A Novel Design of Dielectric Perfect Invisibility Devices" was published in a theoretical physics journal, ...
Acoustic cloaking material 'is inevitable'
Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom - Apr 29, 2008
The work follows recent research on "invisibility cloaks", where a number of teams have shown that synthetic materials, called metamaterials - which are ...
Phasers, force fields, teleportation and time travel
Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom - Apr 25, 2008
What about Michael J. Fox's 'hover board' from Back to the Future or Harry Potter's cloak of invisibility? When will we be able to zap our enemies with ray ...
Physics of the Impossible: A Scientific Exploration into the World ...
Sacramento News & Review, CA - Apr 24, 2008
By Traci J. Macnamara Maybe you?ve questioned the feasibility of Harry Potter?s invisibility cloak. Or you?ve doubted that you?ll ever be able to transport ...
Source: Google News

[PDF] INVISIBILITY THROUGH THE POWER OF STORY: AN ANALYSIS OF THE LIFE JOURNEY OF MR. JOHN, A RURAL SCHOOL -
GM MAXWELL - 2004 - txspace.tamu.edu
... M. Carolyn Clark ... Transcending Invisibility Through the Power of Story: An Analysis
of ... status of truth, the school leadership research literature is virtually ...

The Digital Chameleon Principle: Computing Invisibility by Rendering Transparency -
F Nielsen - IEEE COMPUTER GRAPHICS AND APPLICATIONS, 2007 - doi.ieeecomputersociety.org
... 1 A good example cited by Clarke are excerpts of scholarly ... Such retroreflector cloak
systems, however, provide only a good illusion of invisibility for a ...

[BOOK] Realms of Knowledge: Academic Departments in Secondary Schools -
LS Siskin - 1994 - books.google.com
... its own 'tribe' (Becher, 1989; also Clark, 1987; Geertz ... Chapter 1 The Invisibility
of Departments The subject ... portray the world of the high school the subject ...

[PDF] Graphically Speaking
F Nielsen - computer.org
... 1 A good example cited by Clarke are excerpts of scholarly ... Such retroreflector cloak
systems, however, provide only a good illusion of invisibility for a ...

Queering the Pitch and Coming Out to Play: Lesbians in Physical Education and Sport
G Clarke - Sport, Education and Society, 1998 - informaworld.com
... Spencer-Devlin also discloses how 'the cloak offear' is ... to remain a silent and invisible
presence condemned to ... and homophobia in schools see Clarke (1996, 1997 ...

Library and Information Science Professionals as Community Action Researchers in an Academic Setting … -
B Mehra, D Braquet - Library Trends, 2007 - muse.jhu.edu
... of stories to construct mem- ory, meaning, emotion, and personal and collective
identity (Bower & Clark, 1969; Bruner ... A cloak of invisibility and negative ...

A Review of Family Research in 1954
W Ehrmann - Marriage and Family Living - JSTOR
... the commonplace which is often significant loses its cloak of invisibility. ... Dinitz,
Simon, Dynes, Russell R. and Clarke, Alfred C.: Preferences for male or ...

[BOOK] Social research -
T May - 1997 - niehs.nih.gov
... and research Challenging the scientistic cloak Reason and ... other approaches to evaluation
(see Clarke with Dawson ... Some schools of thought emphasize our creation ...

[BOOK] Invisible Politics: Black Political Behavior -
H Walton - 1985 - books.google.com
... Then, as the research assistant of Professor, now ... sufficiently idealistic and the
behavioral school fails to ... extent that blacks are made invisible and ignored ...


C Boyle - Can. J. Women & L., 1986 - HeinOnline
... is good in that it is better than invisibility, but it ... "[lit is evident.., that the
cloak of value ... Relying, among other things, on Lorenne Clark and Debra Lewis ...

Source: Google Scholar

Clark School Researchers Develop Two-Dimensional Invisibility Cloak
Advancements in Emerging Field of Plasmonics Yield
Revolutionary Technologies

COLLEGE PARK, Md.—Harry Potter may not have talked much about plasmonics in J. K. Rowling's fantasy series, but University of Maryland researchers are using this emerging technology to develop an invisibility cloak that exists beyond the world of bespectacled teenage wizards.

A research team at Maryland's A. James Clark School of Engineering comprised of Professor Christopher Davis, Research Scientist Igor Smolyaninov, and graduate student Yu-Ju Hung, has used plasmon technology to create the world's first invisibility cloak for visible light. The engineers have applied the same technology to build a revolutionary superlens microscope that allows scientists to see details of previously undetectable nanoscale objects.

Generally speaking, when we see an object, we see the visible light that strikes the object and is reflected. The Clark School team's invisibility cloak refracts (or bends) the light that strikes it, so that the light moves around and past the cloak, reflecting nothing, leaving the cloak and its contents "invisible."

The invisibility cloak device is a two-dimensional pattern of concentric rings created in a thin, transparent acrylic plastic layer on a gold film. The plastic and gold each have different refractive properties. The structured plastic on gold in different areas of the cloak creates "negative refraction" effects, which bend plasmons—electron waves generated when light strikes a metallic surface under precise circumstances—around the cloaked region.

This manipulation causes the plasmon waves to appear to have moved in a straight line. In reality they have been guided around the cloak much as water in a stream flows around a rock, and released on the other side, concealing the cloak and the object inside from visible light. The invisibility that this phenomenon creates is not absolutely perfect because of energy loss in the gold film.

The team achieved this invisibility under very specialized conditions. The researchers' cloak is just 10 micrometers in diameter; by comparison, a human hair is between 50 to 100 micrometers wide. Also, the cloak uses a limited range of the visible spectrum, in two dimensions. It would be a significant challenge to extend the cloak to three dimensions because researchers would need to control light waves both magnetically and electronically to steer them around the hidden object. The technology initially may work only for small objects of specific controlled shape.

The team also has used plasmonics to develop superlens microscopy technology, which can be integrated into a conventional optical microscope to view nanoscale details of objects that were previously undetectable.

The superlens microscope could one day image living cells, viruses, proteins, DNA molecules, and other samples, operating much like a point-and-shoot camera. This new technology could revolutionize the capability to view nanoscale objects at a crucial stage of their development. The team believes they can improve the resolution of their microscope images down to about 10 nanometers—one ten thousandth of the width of a human hair.

A large reason for the success of the group's innovations in both invisibility and microscopy is that surface plasmons have very short wave lengths, and can therefore move data around using much smaller-scale guiding structures than in existing devices. These small, rapid waves are generated at optical frequencies, and can transport large amounts of data. The group also has made use of the unique properties of metamaterials, artificially structured composites that help control electromagnetic waves in unusual ways using plasmonic phenomena.

The diverse applications the group has derived from their plasmonics research is an example of the ingenuity of researchers approaching new and dynamic technologies that offer broad and unprecedented capabilities. The research has attracted a great deal of attention within the scientific community, industry and government agencies. Related plasmonics research offers applications for military and computer chip technologies, which could benefit from the higher frequencies and rapid data transfer rates that plasmons offer.

The team's research has been funded by the National Science Foundation and Clark School Corporate Partner BAE Systems.

Smolyaninov and Davis have published an article in the journal Science about their superlens microscope technology, titled "Magnifying Superlens in the Visible Frequency Range." The group and their colleagues from Purdue University will also soon publish a paper about their invisibility cloak research. A manuscript describing the invisibility cloak is available online at http://arxiv.org/abs/0709.2862.

About the A. James Clark School of Engineering
The Clark School of Engineering, situated on the rolling, 1,500-acre University of Maryland campus in College Park, Md., is one of the premier engineering schools in the U.S.

The Clark School's graduate programs are collectively the fastest rising in the nation. In U.S. News & World Report's annual rating of graduate programs, the school is 15th among public and private programs nationally, 9th among public programs nationally and first among public programs in the mid-Atlantic region. The School offers 13 graduate programs and 12 undergraduate programs, including degree and certification programs tailored for working professionals.

The school is home to one of the most vibrant research programs in the country. With major emphasis in key areas such as communications and networking, nanotechnology, bioengineering, reliability engineering, project management, intelligent transportation systems and space robotics, as well as electronic packaging and smart small systems and materials, the Clark School is leading the way toward the next generations of engineering advances.

Visit the Clark School homepage at www.eng.umd.edu.

 
 
 
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