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Journal ArticleDOI

Cloaking Devices, Electromagnetic Wormholes, and Transformation Optics

Allan Greenleaf, +3 more
- 01 Feb 2009 - 
- Vol. 51, Iss: 1, pp 3-33
TLDR
Recent theoretical and experimental progress on making objects invisible to detection by electromagnetic waves is described and ideas for devices that would once have seemed fanciful may now be at least approximately implemented physically using a new class of artificially structured materials called metamaterials.
Abstract
We describe recent theoretical and experimental progress on making objects invisible to detection by electromagnetic waves. Ideas for devices that would once have seemed fanciful may now be at least approximately implemented physically using a new class of artificially structured materials called metamaterials. Maxwell's equations have transformation laws that allow for the design of electromagnetic material parameters that steer light around a hidden region, returning it to its original path on the far side. Not only would observers be unaware of the contents of the hidden region, they would not even be aware that something was being hidden. An object contained in the hidden region, which would have no shadow, is said to be cloaked. Proposals for, and even experimental implementations of, such cloaking devices have received the most attention, but other designs having striking effects on wave propagation are possible. All of these designs are initially based on the transformation laws of the equations that govern wave propagation but, due to the singular parameters that give rise to the desired effects, care needs to be taken in formulating and analyzing physically meaningful solutions. We recount the recent history of the subject and discuss some of the mathematical and physical issues involved.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Inverse Problems: Visibility and Invisibility

TL;DR: This survey article expands on the lectures given at Biarritz in June, 2012, on “Inverse Problems: Visibility and Invisibility", and considers the opposite issue: invisibility: Can one make objects invisible to different types of waves, including light.
Posted Content

On Absence and Existence of the Anomalous Localized Resonance without the Quasi-static Approximation

TL;DR: This paper forms a new condition, the weak anomalous resonance (w-AR), where the speed of the blow up of fields may be slower, and gives simple geometric conditions under which w-AR or ALR may or may not appear.
Posted Content

Transformation Optics for the Modelling of Waves in a Universe with Nontrivial Topology

TL;DR: In this article, transformation optics and invisibility cloaking can be used to construct models in subsets of the Riemannian manifold, where the time-harmonic waves for a given angular wavenumber $k$ are equivalent to the waves in some closed orientable manifold.
Posted Content

The anisotropic Calder{ó}n problem on 3-dimensional conformally St{ä}ckel manifolds

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that the Dirichlet-to-Neumann map is uniquely determined by the boundary of the Riemannian manifold up to dieomorphims that preserve the boundary.
Journal ArticleDOI

Numerical analysis of a finite element method for the electromagnetic concentrator model

TL;DR: A rigorous analysis is provided for the mathematical modelling equations and the FETD method proposed there for solving the electromagnetic concentrator model efficiently without any theoretical analysis.
References
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Book

Partial Differential Equations

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a theory for linear PDEs: Sobolev spaces Second-order elliptic equations Linear evolution equations, Hamilton-Jacobi equations and systems of conservation laws.
Journal ArticleDOI

Negative Refraction Makes a Perfect Lens

TL;DR: The authors' simulations show that a version of the lens operating at the frequency of visible light can be realized in the form of a thin slab of silver, which resolves objects only a few nanometers across.
Journal ArticleDOI

Controlling Electromagnetic Fields

TL;DR: This work shows how electromagnetic fields can be redirected at will and proposes a design strategy that has relevance to exotic lens design and to the cloaking of objects from electromagnetic fields.
Journal ArticleDOI

Metamaterial Electromagnetic Cloak at Microwave Frequencies

TL;DR: This work describes here the first practical realization of a cloak of invisibility, constructed with the use of artificially structured metamaterials, designed for operation over a band of microwave frequencies.
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