PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Researchers create terahertz invisibility cloak

2011-04-28
(Press-News.org) Researchers at Northwestern University have created a new kind of cloaking material that can render objects invisible in the terahertz range.

Though this design can't translate into an invisibility cloak for the visible spectrum, it could have implications in diagnostics, security, and communication.

The cloak, designed by Cheng Sun, assistant professor of mechanical engineering at Northwestern's McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science, uses microfabricated gradient-index materials to manipulate the reflection and refraction of light. Sun's results will be presented May 4 at CLEO: 2011, the annual Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics.

Humans generally recognize objects through two features: their shape and color. To render an object invisible, one must be able to manipulate light so that it will neither scatter at an object's surface nor be absorbed or reflected by it (the process which gives objects color).

In order to manipulate light in the terahertz frequency, which lies between infrared and microwaves, Sun and his group developed metamaterials: materials that are designed at the atomic level. Sun's tiny, prism-shaped cloaking structure, less than 10 millimeters long, was created using a technique called electronic transfer microstereolithography, where researchers use a data projector to project an image on a liquid polymer, then use light to transform the liquid layer into a thin solid layer. Each of the prism's 220 layers has tiny holes that are much smaller than terahertz wavelengths, which means they can vary the refraction index of the light and render invisible anything located beneath a bump on the prism's bottom surface; the light then appears to be reflected by a flat surface.

Sun says the purpose of the cloak is not to hide items but to get a better understanding of how to design materials that can manipulate light propagation.

"This demonstrates that we have the freedom to design materials that can change the refraction index," Sun said. "By doing this we can manipulate light propagation much more effectively."

The terahertz range has been historically ignored because the frequency is too high for electronics. But many organic compounds have a resonant frequency at the terahertz level, which means they could potentially be identified using a terahertz scanner. Sun's research into terahertz optics could have implications in biomedical research (safer detection of certain kinds of cancers) and security (using terahertz scanners at airports).

Next Sun hopes to use what he's learned through the cloak to create its opposite: a terahertz lens. He has no immediate plans to extend his invisibility cloak to visible frequencies.

"That is still far away," he said. "We're focusing on one frequency range, and such a cloak would have to work across the entire spectrum."

INFORMATION:

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Avantium Announces Start-Up Of YXY Polyester Pilot Plant

2011-04-28
Avantium announces the successful start-up of its polyester pilot plant at the Chemelot site in Geleen, the Netherlands. The polyester plant is the first part of the pilot plant that Avantium is building at its new site to demonstrate its YXY technology for green materials and fuels. Avantium's monomer pilot plant is scheduled to become operational in the second half of 2011. The YXY polyester pilot plant will produce bioplastics based on Avantium's YXY technology. Avantium acquired the polyester pilot plant from Johnson Matthey in the United Kingdom, where the plant ...

Sweet chemistry: Carbohydrate adhesion gives stainless steel implants beneficial new functions

2011-04-28
A new chemical bonding process can add new functions to stainless steel and make it a more useful material for implanted biomedical devices. Developed by an interdisciplinary team at the University of Alberta and Canada's National Institute for Nanotechnology, this new process was developed to address some of the problems associated with the introduction of stainless steel into the human body. Implanted biomedical devices, such as cardiac stents, are implanted in over 2 million people every year, with the majority made from stainless steel. Stainless steel has many benefits ...

Rare Pennsylvania fungus is named for Philadelphia botanist

Rare Pennsylvania fungus is named for Philadelphia botanist
2011-04-28
PHILADELPHIA— A Philadelphia botanist who has studied rare plants for 50 years, but has never attained the honor of having a plant named for him is finally getting his due, but with a barely visible organism so rare it may never be seen again. Dr. Alfred "Ernie" Schuyler, emeritus curator of botany at the Academy of Natural Sciences and a world expert on rare plants, recently was honored when a colleague discovered a new species of lichen and named it after him. The barely visible lichen (LIE kin), Vezdaea schuyleriana, is known to exist on a single boulder in rural ...

SoloHealth Posts Record-breaking Growth & Stats; Fueled by Emerging Self-Service Healthcare Market

2011-04-28
SoloHealth (www.solohealth.com), the leader in self-service healthcare technology, announced today growth statistics for the end of Q1 that include record-breaking product expansion and continued staff growth, as well as strong revenue increases. SoloHealth executives cite the emerging self-service consumer healthcare market as the primary driver for growth and rapid deployment of its consumer healthcare kiosks nationwide. "We are extremely bullish on SoloHealth's continued growth and success, especially with this continued rise in consumer's desire for self-service ...

How to Clean Your Laptop Screen - a Step-by-Step Guide

How to Clean Your Laptop Screen - a Step-by-Step Guide
2011-04-28
One of the biggest problems with laptops - we are talking about nontechnical problems here - is that they get too dirty too soon. It is in their very nature to get dirty quickly, because they are supposed to be used on the move, and we do end up using them in strangest of places! Well, the poor laptop screens have to bear the brunt of it, and if they are not cleaned for a few days, they could be smudged beyond recognition. That is the reason people are always looking for methods on how to clean laptop screens, which help them to protect their expensive devices and help ...

Get a whiff of this: Low-cost sensor can diagnose bacterial infections

Get a whiff of this: Low-cost sensor can diagnose bacterial infections
2011-04-28
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Bacterial infections really stink. And that could be the key to a fast diagnosis. Researchers have demonstrated a quick, simple method to identify infectious bacteria by smell using a low-cost array of printed pigments as a chemical sensor. Led by University of Illinois chemistry professor Ken Suslick, the team published its results in the Journal of the American Chemical Society. Hospitals have used blood cultures as the standard for identifying blood-borne bacterial infections for more than a century. While there have been some improvements in automating ...

Penn research demonstrates motivation plays a critical role in determining IQ test scores

2011-04-28
PHILADELPHIA — New psychology research at the University of Pennsylvania demonstrates a correlation between a test-taker's motivation and performance on an IQ test and, more important, between that performance and a person's future success. Angela Lee Duckworth, an assistant professor of psychology in Penn's School of Arts and Sciences, led the research, which involved two related studies. The first was a meta-analysis of previous research into the effect of incentives on IQ scores. For individuals who had above-average scores at baseline, motivation accounted for ...

SJD Accountancy Announced As Finalists In The UK Customer Experience Awards 2011

2011-04-28
Continuing in their commitment to provide outstanding customer service to their clients, SJD Accountancy were announced today as finalists in the UK Customer Experience Awards 2011, in the 'Professional Services and Research Agencies' category. Having won the Institute of Customer Service 'Customer Commitment award', back in March SJD Accountancy, the UK's largest accountants to Contractors with over 10,000 Limited Company clients, continue to put customer service and client management at the forefront of everything they do. The UK Customer Experience Awards, acknowledges ...

Vitamin E helps diminish a type of fatty liver disease in children

2011-04-28
A specific form of vitamin E improved the most severe form of fatty liver disease in some children, according to a study funded by the National Institutes of Health. Results appear in the April 27 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association. A previous study found vitamin E effective in some adults with the disease. Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is the most common chronic liver disease among U.S. children. NAFLD ranges in severity from steatosis (fat in the liver without injury) to nonalcoholic steatohepatitis or NASH (fat, inflammation, and liver ...

Psychologists ask how well -- or badly -- we remember together

2011-04-28
Several years ago, Suparna Rajaram noticed a strange sort of contagion in a couple she was close to. One partner acquired dementia—and the other lost the nourishing pleasures of joint reminiscence. "When the other person cannot validate shared memories," said Rajaram, "they are both robbed of the past." From this observation came a keen and enduring interest in the social nature of memory, an area of scholarship occupied mostly by philosophers, sociologists, and historians—and notably unattended to until recently by cognitive psychologists. So Rajaram, a psychology ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Around the world, children’s cooperative behaviors and norms converge toward community-specific norms in middle childhood, Boston College researchers report

How cultural norms shape childhood development

University of Phoenix research finds AI-integrated coursework strengthens student learning and career skills

Next generation genetics technology developed to counter the rise of antibiotic resistance

Ochsner Health hospitals named Best-in-State 2026

A new window into hemodialysis: How optical sensors could make treatment safer

High-dose therapy had lasting benefits for infants with stroke before or soon after birth

‘Energy efficiency’ key to mountain birds adapting to changing environmental conditions

Scientists now know why ovarian cancer spreads so rapidly in the abdomen

USF Health launches nation’s first fully integrated institute for voice, hearing and swallowing care and research

Why rethinking wellness could help students and teachers thrive

Seabirds ingest large quantities of pollutants, some of which have been banned for decades

When Earth’s magnetic field took its time flipping

Americans prefer to screen for cervical cancer in-clinic vs. at home

Rice lab to help develop bioprinted kidneys as part of ARPA-H PRINT program award

Researchers discover ABCA1 protein’s role in releasing molecular brakes on solid tumor immunotherapy

Scientists debunk claim that trees in the Dolomites anticipated a solar eclipse

Impact of the 2010 World Health Organization Code on global physician migration

Measuring time at the quantum level

Researchers find a way to 3D print one of industry’s hardest engineering materials

Coupling dynamic effect based on the molecular sieve regulation of Fe nanoparticles

Engineering the “golden bridge”: Efficient tunnel junction design for next-generation all-perovskite tandem solar cells

Understanding how cancer cells use water pressure to move through the body

Killing cancer cells with RNA therapeutics

Mechanism-guided prediction of CMAS corrosion resistance and service life for high-entropy rare-earth disilicates

Seeing the unseen: Scientists demonstrate dual-mode color generation from invisible light

Revealing deformation mechanisms of the mineral antigorite in subduction zones

I’m walking here! A new model maps foot traffic in New York City

AI model can read and diagnose a brain MRI in seconds

Researchers boost perovskite solar cell performance via interface engineering

[Press-News.org] Researchers create terahertz invisibility cloak