invisibility cloaks

Optical cloaking and invisibility: From fiction toward a technological reality
photo by J. Adam Fenster / University of Rochester Optical cloaking and invisibility: From fiction
Coming soon: VR and AR Devices at 1/100 the Cost and 1/10,000 the Thickness
Coming soon: VR and AR Devices at 1/100 the Cost and 1/10,000 the Thickness –
A new acoustic invisibility cloak for submarines and more?

EPFL researchers have found a way to make materials that are normally opaque to sound

New approach to invisibility cloaking could be used to secure data transmissions and advance sensing, telecommunications and other applications

New approach to invisibility cloaking could be used to secure data transmissions and advance sensing,

New cloaking material hides things from infrared eyes

Infrared cameras are the heat-sensing eyes that help drones find their targets even in the

Acoustic ground cloaks appear to be getting closer

Researchers designed an underwater acoustic ground cloak by engineering material with properties not typically found

Infrared invisibility material invented

Based on fictional dinosaurs and squid, technology could protect soldiers and structures Materials inspired by

Moving closer to an operational cloaking chip

According to the recent study Invisibility Cloaking Scheme by Evanescent Distortion on Composite Plasmonic Waveguides with Si Nano-Spacer? published

A new class of ‘invisible’ materials is within sight

The theoretical discovery of transparent particles that break the previously accepted limit of visibility opens

New cloaking technology uses The Beam of Invisibility

A new cloaking technology has been developed at TU Wien: a special kind of material

Discovery increases LED efficiency by 50% and could even lead to invisibility cloaking devices

In an advance that could boost the efficiency of LED lighting by 50 percent and

Practical Invisibility Cloak With Photonic Crystals

Almost as elusive as unicorns, finding practical materials for invisibility cloaking is challenging. Michigan Technological

Cloaking device is the first device that we know of that can do three-dimensional, continuously multidirectional cloaking

Inspired perhaps by Harry Potter’s invisibility cloak, scientists have recently developed several ways—some simple and

A flexible skin that traps radar waves, cloaks objects

Iowa State University engineers have developed a new flexible, stretchable and  tunable “meta-skin” that uses

Robot chameleon can change colour to blend into its surroundings

Guoping Wang of Wuhan University, China, and his colleagues created it to show off their