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‘Metascreen’ forms ultrathin invisibility cloak

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Ashley N. Rice, [email protected]

A new invisibility cloak can hide 3-D objects from microwaves while in their natural environment, in all directions and from all of the observers’ positions. Most invisibility cloaks up to this point have been large, cumbersome contraptions. The University of Texas at Austin’s cloak, however, uses an ultrathin material called a “metascreen” that was fabricated by attaching strips of 66-µm-thick copper tape to a 100-µm-thick, flexible polycarbonate film in a fishnet design. In tests, the material was used to cloak an 18-cm cylindrical rod from...Read full article

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    Published: June 2013
    AmericasAndrea AluBasic ScienceImagingindustrialinvisibility cloakingmantle cloakingMaterials & ChemicalsmetamaterialsmetascreenmicrowavesOpticsResearch & TechnologyTech PulseTexasUniversity of Texas at Austinvisible frequencieswave scattering

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