Invisibility

Invisibility

Re: Invisibility Posted by reaper47 on Mon Sep 18th 2006 at 3:39pm
reaper47
2827 posts
Posted 2006-09-18 3:39pm
reaper47
member
2827 posts 1921 snarkmarks Registered: Feb 16th 2005 Location: Austria
Take a look at this article!

Researchers at the Imperial College of London have discovered a way to "bend" light around solid surfaces (or something). As a result you can see through things using quantum mechanics. Pretty awesome and non-fake I think.
Re: Invisibility Posted by Andrei on Mon Sep 18th 2006 at 4:09pm
Andrei
2455 posts
Posted 2006-09-18 4:09pm
Andrei
member
2455 posts 1248 snarkmarks Registered: Sep 15th 2003 Location: Bucharest, Romania
Damn impressive!
non-fake I think.
That site doesn't look like some crappy newsblog to me.
Re: Invisibility Posted by Tracer Bullet on Mon Sep 18th 2006 at 5:53pm
Tracer Bullet
2271 posts
Posted 2006-09-18 5:53pm
2271 posts 445 snarkmarks Registered: May 22nd 2003 Occupation: Graduate Student (Ph.D) Location: Seattle WA, USA
Crappy news-blog or not, I've seldom seen a news-media account of advanced research that wasn't twisted in some way. I believe this is the original publication on the matter. It's a really cool paper that was published in Nature Materials about nine months ago, but suffice it to say the most eye-catching of the claims made in that news piece are bogus. I am quite certain that the picture of the "transparent hand" was a particularly bad piece of photoshop work. Yes, the researchers have created a material that can be made transparent though application of an electric field, but we are talking about a semiconductor nanostructure similar to a computer chip. Claiming that you are going to be able to make ordinary objects transparent through this work is like saying that you are going to use your thumbnail as a substitute for the Pentium 4 in your computer!

As I said, this is really cool work that will likely have large impacts on laser and communications technology, but don't hold your breath for the invisibility cloaks, or even the medical imaging that your article envisions.
Some people are like slinkys...

They aren?t really good for anything, but you can't help but laugh when one tumbles down the stairs.
Re: Invisibility Posted by Addicted to Morphine on Mon Sep 18th 2006 at 6:01pm
Posted 2006-09-18 6:01pm
3012 posts 529 snarkmarks Registered: Feb 15th 2005
I was just sitting here waiting for Tracer Bullet to weigh in. :smile:
Re: Invisibility Posted by reaper47 on Mon Sep 18th 2006 at 7:22pm
reaper47
2827 posts
Posted 2006-09-18 7:22pm
reaper47
member
2827 posts 1921 snarkmarks Registered: Feb 16th 2005 Location: Austria
Me too, actually.

But I'm a believer. For the sheer coolness of it.
Re: Invisibility Posted by FatStrings on Tue Sep 19th 2006 at 2:53am
FatStrings
1242 posts
Posted 2006-09-19 2:53am
1242 posts 144 snarkmarks Registered: Aug 11th 2005 Occupation: Architecture Student Location: USA
a technology like this would impress me, yet i forsee something of this type of technology in our future, if not now when, however, i must agree with TB here
Re: Invisibility Posted by Nickelplate on Tue Sep 19th 2006 at 4:57am
Nickelplate
2770 posts
Posted 2006-09-19 4:57am
2770 posts 346 snarkmarks Registered: Nov 23rd 2004 Occupation: Prince of Pleasure Location: US
Fatstrings... what?

I don't care one way or another about this. Pretty much what will end up happening is one of 2 things: A large company will buy this technology and we'll never see it again (because they jacked the price up, not because it's invisibilite tech.) or the government will use it to kill people, and Iran will get it from the Russians who say they are our allies.

Soon after Iran gets the technology, the media (who loves to combine words into catch phrases) will start writing about "Invislam" and will get everyone whipped into a terror-frenzy....
I tried sniffing coke, but the ice cubes kept getting stuck in my nose.
http://www.dimebowl.com
Re: Invisibility Posted by wil5on on Tue Sep 19th 2006 at 12:42pm
wil5on
1733 posts
Posted 2006-09-19 12:42pm
wil5on
member
1733 posts 570 snarkmarks Registered: Dec 12th 2003 Occupation: Mapper Location: Adelaide
Nickelplate... what? Why did you feel the need to bring politics into... everything?

Pretty cool, but as TB said, not as cool as the article says. Yet.
"If you talk at all during this lesson, you have detention. Do you understand?"
  • My yr11 Economics teacher
Re: Invisibility Posted by reaper47 on Tue Sep 19th 2006 at 2:56pm
reaper47
2827 posts
Posted 2006-09-19 2:56pm
reaper47
member
2827 posts 1921 snarkmarks Registered: Feb 16th 2005 Location: Austria
Ok, a new challenge: Cheese!

Who manages to relate cheese to politics or religion? Anyone?
Re: Invisibility Posted by Andrei on Tue Sep 19th 2006 at 3:04pm
Andrei
2455 posts
Posted 2006-09-19 3:04pm
Andrei
member
2455 posts 1248 snarkmarks Registered: Sep 15th 2003 Location: Bucharest, Romania
Ok, a new challenge: Cheese!

Who manages to relate cheese to politics or religion? Anyone?
1)It's forbidden to eat cheese during fast.

2)The song "Dance This Mess Around" from the B-52's: "Why don't you
dance with me? I'm not a Limburger. Just a limburger." People from
Limburg (in Holland and in Belgium) feel this as an offence because
they think it is about them. They don't know this cheese as
"Limburger", but under different local names. Many tried to pass a bill
banning the song in the before mentioned countries (but failed).

I win. :heee: