
Roger Highfield talks to the British scientists who have found a way to make microscopic objects vanish!
It
sounds like magic walls, curtains, even dresses could be rendered
transparent by bathing them in a specially crafted beam of light.
Rescuers could use the beam to peer through rubble after an earthquake,
while doctors could gaze at a damaged lung after making a patient's
skin and ribs vanish. This remarkable disappearing trick is the kind of
sorcery that would grace the pages of a Harry Potter book, yet it is a
prediction of real-world science. Magic and science do, after all, have
their roots in a fundamental urge to make sense of the world so that we
may manipulate it to our own ends. And, in the sense that a wizard is a
wise man, they still exist today; wizards (and a few witches) can be
seen in the Royal Society, Britain's national academy of science. Next
week, a team led by Prof Chris Phillips, a quantum conjurer from
Imperial College London, will join an elite coven at the Royal
Society's summer exhibition (see below for details), where they will
present tantalising evidence of how to make objects disappear. At the
flick of a switch, he and his colleague Dr Mark Frogley can make
something invisible, albeit just a fraction of a millimetre square of a
special material and only for a one ten thousandth of a millionth of a
second. Things are visible because of the way that their atoms interact
with a beam of light. When the beam, an electromagnetic wave, hits an
atom on this page the electrons in the lowest energy state of the atom
absorb the wave's energy and rise to higher energy levels. Only light
of exactly the right colour, the one that corresponds to the energy
difference between the two levels, will be absorbed - all other colours
pass through. To show that it is possible to stop absorption from
happening, so this light beam can also pass through, Prof Phillips, Dr
Frogley and Swiss colleagues at the University of Neuchatel created an
idealised atom. They put down single layers of atoms, one at a time, to
create specially patterned crystal wafers only a few billionths of a
metre deep. These two-dimensional sandwiches, dubbed nanostructures,
behave like "artificial atoms": within them, electrons rattle around in
energy levels that are customised to respond in a predictable way to
laser light. In this way, they could exploit an effect predicted by
quantum mechanics, the baffling theory that rules the atomic domain: an
electron can be prevented from absorbing a particle of laser light and
jumping to a higher energy level if a second laser beam is used to link
or "couple" the two energy levels to a third one. To perform this
conjuring trick in his lab at Imperial, Prof Phillips uses intense
beams of infra-red light from lasers that rely on special semiconductor
crystals grown in the former Soviet Union. Although the laser is rated
at 10 million w atts, it is surprisingly safe: he encourages me to put
my hand in the invisible beam: with each pulse of laser light, I feel a
tiny pinprick as some of my skin cells are vaporised. Using two
powerful beams made this way, the team performed its vanishing trick:
the artificial atoms became transparent to one beam when a second -
coupling - laser illuminated them at the same time. "By shining an
invisible powerful laser onto these 'artificial atoms', we have learnt
how to control the motion of the electrons so they no longer absorb
light - when the laser is switched on, the crystals instantly become
invisible, only to return to their normal opaque state when the laser
is switched off." As Prof Phillips says, "we have proved the physics".
Although this was achieved with an idealised material, it suggests that
by carefully designing a wand of laser light it may be possible to make
anything transparent. "The effect has the potential to lead to all
sorts of new applications. You can imagine a laser that works at
frequencies we can't see and, when it shines on your hand, it would
open up a transparent hole." Called "dressing" by quantum boffins,
coupling can do more than stop materials from absorbing light. Turn up
the coupling laser and the light passing through an object is
amplified. "If you made my hand transparent so I could see something
the other side, like your face, I could make it appear brighter and
brighter," he says. The laws of physics predict that something strange
occurs at the same time: as the image brightens, there is a dramatic
slowing down, by a factor of almost 40, of the speed of light inside
the artificial atom. "This may hold the key to ways of storing and
manipulating information in a new and entirely optical way," says Prof
Phillips. Scientists fantasise about a "quantum computer", one that is
predicted to have stupendous power - if only it could be built. "A
quantum computer made from just 1,000 of our nanostructures could
perform calculations in a second which would take a normal computer
longer than the age of the known universe, so although it will be very
difficult, it's a goal well worth chasing."
What is perhaps
even more remarkable is that this is one of no fewer than four
approaches to invisibility to emerge in the past couple of years. On
the floor below Prof Phillips is the office of Sir John Pendry, a
theoretician who has taken a different approach to invisibility that
puts emphasis on creating materials to ply light, so it can bend around
an object, rather than pass through. Working with colleagues at Duke
University, North Carolina, Sir John has found a way to manipulate
light using "metamaterials", whose properties derive from their
microscopic structure rather than their chemical composition. Their
first application was in realising bizarre optical properties that were
first postulated in 1968 by the Russian physicist Victor Veselago . He
had been studying the laws that describe light and other
electromagnetic radiation which were laid down in the 19th century by
the great Scottish mathematical physicist James Clerk Maxwell. Veselago
wondered what would happen if two of the constants in Maxwell's
equations were flipped from positive to negative. Peculiar optical
properties resulted but Veselago's work remained obscure until six
years ago, when his mathematical fantasy was realised by the newly
invented metamaterials. They could be made with a negative refractive
index - a measure of the ability to warp light - so that light entering
them bends in the opposite direction to light passing through normal
materials. Then Sir John found that Veselago materials could make a
"superlens" that can create a perfect image. This discovery has many
practical uses; for example, light beams can be focused as small as the
features on microchips, making electronics faster and smarter. At this
point, Sir John waves around what looks like a pizza base. It is a
metamaterial lens, consisting of copper wires and loops, smaller than
the millimetre scale wavelength of radar, that can focus a radar beam.
Now he has built on this idea in a proposal for a cloaking device. To
achieve invisibility, the secret is to use metamaterials with a
gradient of refractive indices to make light waves flow around an
object, as happens in a mirage, when blue light from the sky is bent by
heated air to create the impression of a blue pond in the desert. In
this way, "electromagnetic fields can be dragged into almost any
desired configuration", says Sir John. His invisibility cloak would be
woven of metamaterials based on metals, because of their extraordinary
responsiveness to light (which is why they make such good mirrors), but
fashioned into structures at near-atomic dimensions. When
electromagnetic waves encountered this cloak they would produce neither
a reflection nor a shadow but skirt around so that whatever lies inside
the cloak remains out of view. There are rival stealth theories. Prof
Ulf Leonhardt, a black hole theorist at the University of St Andrews,
has come up with a variant of this idea. Prof Graeme Milton of the
University of Utah, Salt Lake City, and Nicolae-Alexandru Nicorovici of
the University of Technology, Sydney, suggest that superlenses can make
things placed nearby invisible. And in another proposal, Dr Andrea Alù
and Prof Nader Engheta of the University of Pennsylvania devised a way
to make objects disappear by, in effect, cancelling the light they
scatter by using a "plasmonic cover". The cover is awash with plasmons,
ripples in the ocean of electrons flowing across the surface of
nanostructures of silver and gold. When light of a given frequency
strikes a plasmon that oscillates at a compatible frequency, the energy
from the light is harvested by the plasmon and eventually converted
back to light, cancelling light scattered by the object and rendering
it near invisible. The are drawbacks to these theoretical invisibility
cloaks - a plasmonic cover would have to be delicately tuned to hide
each different object, for example. But we have come a long way since
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, when the late Douglas Adams
alluded to how Hades' "cap of darkness", which made the wearer vanish,
and the Romulan cloaking device were firmly the stuff of myth and
science fiction. According to Adams, objects could be made invisible by
using a SEP-field, where SEP stands for Someone Else's Problem. This
problem may now have been solved - four times over. Source|The Telegraph
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