In order to exploit electromagnetism, materials are commonly used to control and direct the electromagnetic fields. For example, a glass lens in a camera directs the rays of light to form an image, metal cages are used to screen sensitive equipment from electromagnetic radiation, and various forms of ‘black bodies’ are utilized to prevent unwanted reflections. One aspect of electromagnetism which is of particular interest, is the use of materials in the manipulation of electromagnetic waves such as to conceal or cloak objects or volumes of space from detection by an outside observer.
Several known methods exist which attempt to achieve electromagnetic concealment of objects. For example, it is possible to use a series of cameras to project an image to an observer of what he would see if an object in question were not blocking his view path. As a result, the observer does not realize that the object is present. This method, however, relies on the use of active components, and depends heavily on the relative positioning of the object, cameras and observer at all times.
Further known concealment methods include traditional “stealth technology” and the use of low radar cross section structures. These are designed to minimize back reflection of radar or other electromagnetic waves. Whilst these structures can provide a reduced or altered electromagnetic signature, because they involve either the scattering of incident waves away from the target or absorbing incident waves, the objects which they hide are still detectable in transmission.
In their paper, Physics Rev. E Vol 72, Art. No., 016623 (2005), A Alu and N Engheta suggest a scheme for the concealment of spherical and cylindrical objects through the use of plasmonic and metamaterial ‘cloaks’ or covers. Whilst this paper provides a method of reducing the total scattering cross section of such objects, it relies on a specific knowledge of the shape and material properties of the object being hidden. In particular, the electromagnetic cloak and the concealed object form a composite, whose scattering properties can be reduced in the lowest order approximation. Therefore, if the shape of the object changes, the shape of the cloak must change accordingly. Furthermore, this method relies on a resonance effect, such that if the frequency drifts away from its resonant peak, the method is less effective. It is therefore a narrowband method, which cannot be implemented for broadband applications.
A further aspect of electromagnetism which is of interest is the use of materials in electromagnetic sensing and energy harvesting applications. Several known devices exist in this area, such as satellite dishes and solar energy panels. Whilst such prior art devices are operable to collect or detect electromagnetic radiation incident upon them from a number of different directions, and can be moveable to capture radiation incident from any desired direction, they do not have the capability to capture electromagnetic radiation incident from all directions at any given time. Problems therefore arise in applications when the direction of the electromagnetic source is initially unknown or constantly changing, such as in solar energy collection and microwave energy beaming on mobile platforms.
The invention is set out in the claims. According to a first embodiment, because a method is provided in which those rays which would have passed through a particular volume of space are deflected around the volume and returned to their original trajectory, an observer would conclude that the rays had passed directly through that volume of space. This will be the case regardless of the relative positioning of the observer and the concealed volume. Furthermore, because no radiation can get into the concealed volume nor any radiation gets out, an object of any shape or material placed in the concealed volume will be invisible to the observer.
In one aspect, the invention utilizes a co-ordinate transformation approach which is independent of the sizes of the concealed and concealing volume and does not suffer from any of the fundamental scaling issues which affect known concealment schemes. It is also possible to use the transformation method for any shape of concealed or concealing volume. The wavelength of the electromagnetic radiation does not appear in the solution, such that the invention can be applied for any size structure and for any wavelength, and for near and far fields.
In a further embodiment of the invention, all electromagnetic fields which are incident on an outer surface of a particular volume of space are concentrated into a inner core region, regardless of their direction of incidence on the outer surface. This enables a detector or collector to be placed at the inner core into which the electromagnetic fields have been concentrated, allowing it to interact with the intensified fields from all directions at that location. Because a method is described in which those rays which pass through the particular volume of space are returned to their original trajectory outwards of its outer surface, an observer would conclude that the rays had passed directly through that volume of space, regardless of the relative positioning of the observer and the volume in question. In addition, the present invention enables a detector placed within the inner core region to have its material properties matched to the surrounding layer such that it will also be invisible to an observer viewing the set up from any direction.
In overview, according to a first embodiment the invention provides a method of concealing an object or volume of space by means of redirecting the electromagnetic field lines around it. Any field lines which normally would flow through the concealed volume are redirected through a surrounding concealing volume. Outside of the cloaking structure, the field lines remain unperturbed. The cloaking structure is formed from a metamaterial, that is a material designed to exhibit the specific material parameters required for cloaking the object or volume in question. In particular, the electric permittivity ε and magnetic permeability μ and hence the refractive index n of the cloaking metamaterial can be varied effectively continuously spatially in order to manipulate the electromagnetic field lines and hence effectively conceal the enclosed volume. As a result of the invention, the concealed volume is undetectable to an outside observer, and any electromagnetic radiation produced by an object within the concealed volume cannot escape from it.
In a further embodiment the invention provides a method of concentrating the electromagnetic fields incident upon the outer surface of a concentrator device into an inner core region. The concentrator structure comprises a concentrating volume and a collecting volume. Any field lines which would normally flow through the concentrating volume are redirected into an inner collecting volume. Outside of the concentrator annulus surrounding the concentrating volume, the field lines remain unperturbed. The concentrator structure is formed from a metamaterial in a similar manner to that described above for the cloaking structure above.
Whilst, as is outlined in more detail below, the transformation method described herein can be applied to conceal any desired volume using any desired cloaking structure, for simplicity it will first be described in relation to the simple spherical case as shown in
The theory of propagation of electromagnetic waves is well known and so only the relevant aspects are summarised here in the context of the invention. In free space, the magnetic field strength H is related to the magnetic field intensity B and the magnetic permeability of free space, μ0, via the equation B=μ0H. The electric field E in free space is related to the electric displacement field D and electric permittivity of free space ε0 via the equation D=ε0E. In a dielectric the value of ε and μ are modified by the relative permittivity and permeability value εr, μr and the refractive index of the invention is given by nr=±√{square root over (εμ)}. As will be well known to the skilled person in the art, the three vectors E, H, and S are mutually orthogonal, with the Poynting vector S being calculable via the vector cross product S=E×H. The Poynting vector S gives the direction and magnitude of energy flow per unit area per unit time of an electromagnetic wave, and in a ray trajectory diagram such as that shown in
As described in more detail below the approach further requires solution of Maxwell's equations in relation to the redirected fields. For ease of depiction, redirection of the Poynting vector in particular will be addressed in the following description.
In order to calculate the electromagnetic properties which a cloaking structure must possess in order to effectively implement the desired cloaking effects, the first step is to calculate the distortion which must be applied to the Poynting vector S so that the rays do not pass through the sphere 100 of radius R1. As shown in
q1(x,y,z),q2(x,y,z),q3(x,y,z) (1)
In this second mesh 204, lines of constant q2, q3 define the generalized q1 axis, and so on. It will be seen that conversely if the second mesh 204 comprised a set of points defined by equal increments along the q1, q2, q3 axes, it would appear distorted in the x, y, z Cartesian frame, as a comparison of
The benefit of performing this transformation is that, as described below, it can be shown that it is possible to solve Maxwell's equations in the same form in the transformed geometry as in the original geometry, with only a corresponding transform of the spatially distributed values of ε and μ being required. This can be understood intuitively from the recognition that variation of the permittivity E and permeability μ values, and hence the refractive index n in a space, is equivalent to distorting the geometry of the space as seen by a light ray. It will be noted that the approach specifically addresses modification of the value of ε and μ, individually rather than of the refractive index n=+±√{square root over (εμ)}. In particular this allows reflection between interfaces of different media to be removed by ensuring impedance (Z) matching where
As will be known to the skilled person, Maxwell's equations in a system of Cartesian coordinates take the form:
∇×E=−μμ0∂H/∂t,
∇×E=−εε0∂E/∂t (2)
where both electric permittivity ε and magnetic permeability μ depend on position. When a coordinate transformation is applied to these equations, in the new co-ordinate system they take the form:
∇q×Ê=−μ0{circumflex over (μ)}∂Ĥ/∂t,
∇q×Ĥ=−ε0{circumflex over (ε)}∂Ê/∂t (3)
where ε and μ are in general tensors, and Ê, and Ĥ are renormalized electric and magnetic fields. All four quantities are simply related to originals. In other words the form of Maxwell's equation is preserved by a co-ordinate transformation: the co-ordinate transformation does not change the fact that we are still solving Maxwell's equations, it simply changes the definition of ε, μ.
In particular, the effect of the transformation of μ and ε is to scale them both by a common factor. A generalized solution to this is as follows.
We define three units vectors, u1, u2, u3, to point along the generalized q1, q2, q3 axes. The length of a line element is given by,
ds2=dx2+dy2+dz2=Q11dq12+Q22M+Q33dq32+2Q12dq1dq2+2Q13dq1dq3+2Q23dq2dq3 (G1)
where,
In particular we shall need the length of a line element directed along one of the three axes,
dsi=Qidqi (G3)
where for shorthand,
Qi2=Qii (G4)
To calculate ∇×E consider a small element, small enough that it resembles a parallelepiped (
First we calculate the projection of ∇×E onto the normal to the u1-u2 plane by taking a line integral around the u1-u2 parallelogram and applying Stokes' theorem (
E1=E·u1,E2=E·u2,E3=E·u3 (G5)
so that,
or,
where we use the conventional superscript notation for contravariant components of a vector. We have defined,
Ê1=Q1E1,Ê2=Q2E2,Ê3=Q3E3 (G8)
Note that the right-hand side of equation (10) is simple ‘component 3’ of curl evaluated in the new co-ordinate system. Now applying Maxwell,
We write H in terms of the contravariant components,
H=H1u1+H2u2+H3u3 (G10)
which in turn can be expressed in terms of the covariant components,
where the first part defines g, and
H1=H·u1,H2=H·u2,H3=H·u3 (G12)
Inverting g gives
Hi=Σj=13gijHj. (G13)
Substituting equation (13) into (12) gives
Define
{circumflex over (μ)}ij=μgij|u1·(u2×u3)|Q1Q2Q3(QiQj)−1 (G15)
And
Ĥj=QjHj (G16)
so that,
Hence on substituting from equation (10),
and by symmetry between E and H fields,
where
{circumflex over (ε)}ij=εgij|u1·(u2×u3)|Q1Q2Q3(QiQj)−1 (G20)
Note that these expressions simplify considerable if the new co-ordinate system is orthogonal, e.g., cylindrical or spherical, when
gij|u1·(u2×u3)|=δij (G21)
In the case of an orthogonal geometry (Cartesian, spherical or cylindrical) but the renormalized values of the permittivity and permeability are:
And:
B′=μ0μ′H′ and D′=ε0εE′ (7)
Referring back to the spherical case as shown in
where f(r) is a monotonically increasing function of r, this will map the entire interior of a sphere 106 of radius R2 into an annulus bounded by two spheres 100, 106 radii R1 and R2 respectively. There is symmetry for ϕ and θ because the field lines are being compressed radially only, so their angular positioning is not distorted.
The simplest solution to equation (8) arises when f(r)=r, which simplifies to give:
r′=R1+r(R2−R1)/R2,
θ′=θ,
ϕ′=ϕ (9)
In order to ascertain the electromagnetic properties which will be required of the cloaking annulus 102 material so that it achieves the desired result of cloaking any object in the sphere 100 R1, the transformation which has been imposed on r, ϕ and θ must be applied in an analogous manner to ε and μ, as shown for the general case above. At each point (x, y, z) in space, ε and μ will have component (εx, εy, εz), (μx, μy, μz) which must be transformed to spherical coordinate valve (ε′r, ε′θ, ε′ϕ), (μ′r, μ′θ, μ′ϕ) in the transformed geometry.
We do this in two steps:
First transform to spherical coordinates without any compression,
x=r cos ϕ sin θ,y=r sin ϕ sin θ,Z=r cos θ (A1)
so that, as shown in equation (4) above, in the new frame,
We calculate,
and hence,
where εr, εθ, εϕ the three components of the permittivity tensor in the original Cartesian frame, and we assume that the permittivity and permeability are equal. Note that we can easily extract the Cartesian view of εr, εθ, εϕ from (A4) by removing the appropriate factors of r.
In order to create a protected space inside the sphere radius R1 we make a further transformation to a new cylindrical system in which the radius is compressed taking any ray trajectories with it. It is noted that computer programs work in Cartesian coordinates and therefore that it is possible to re-express the compressed radial coordinate system in terms of a compressed Cartesian system, x′y′z′, by removing factors of r′.
Consider the transformation from equation (9)
r′=R1+r(R2−R1)/R2, θ′=θ, ϕ′=ϕ (A5)
which can be re-expressed as,
We calculate,
so that in the new frame,
for R1<r′<R2
Alternatively we can reinterpret these values in a Cartesian coordinate frame, x′ y′ z′, which is easily done by comparison with (A4),
where we have assumed that the starting material is vacuum.
for R2<r′
In free space,
εr′=μr′=εθ′=μθ′=ε∅′=μ∅′=1 (11)
for r′<R1 we may choose any value we please for the dielectric functions since radiation never penetrates into this region. In this region ε′, μ′ are free to take any value without restriction whilst still remaining invisible, and not contributing to electromagnetic scattering. This will be the case for all cloaked volumes, regardless of their shape or size.
If a suitable cloaking material can be implemented for the annulus 102 of radius R1<r<R2, this will exclude all fields from entering the central region 100 of radius R1 and, conversely, will prevent all fields from escaping from this region. The cloaking structure itself and any object placed in the concealed sphere 100 R1 will therefore be undetectable in either reflection or transmission. It will be noted that at all points in the medium the impedance
such that no unwanted reflection in the medium, caused by impedance mismatch, takes place.
It is noted that if the impedance z=√{square root over (μ/ε)}=1 is achieved at all points in the metamaterial, the cloaking structure and concealed volume will appear to contain only free space, and so will be invisible if embedded in free space. If the cloaking structure is embedded in another medium the effect will differ, for example if embedded in water it would have the appearance of a bubble. In order to make the cloaking structure invisible in another medium it is necessary to match the ratio of μ and ε in the metamaterial to that of the surrounding medium at the interface between the two. As the skilled person will appreciate, whilst this changes the numerical values of ε and μ in the cloaking structure metamaterial, the general transformation theory outlined above remains the same. That is, because the present invention enables ε and μ to be controlled in a metamaterial independently of one another, it is possible to achieve any desired value of z, to match the impedance of the metamaterial to that of its surroundings.
Whilst in
The theoretical solution outlined above can be demonstrated using a ray-tracing program to calculate the ray trajectories. According to such a program, a specified material is assumed to exist around a central volume that is to be ‘cloaked’, or rendered invisible to the user. Using the specified parameters as input, the ray-tracing code confirms the theoretical prediction. Ray tracing programs of this type will be well known to those skilled in the art, although some existing programs will not be able to deal with the complexity of the problem for this invention. In
First transform to cylindrical coordinates without any compression,
x=r cos θ,y=r sin θ,Z=z (A8)
so that in the new frame,
We calculate,
and hence,
where εr, εθ, εZ the three components of the permittivity tensor in the original Cartesian frame, and we assume that the permittivity and permeability are equal. Note that we can easily extract the Cartesian view of εr, εθ, εZ from (A13) by removing the appropriate factors of r.
In order to create a protected space inside a cylinder radius R1 we make a further transformation to a new cylindrical system in which the radius is compressed taking any ray trajectories with it. It is noted that computer programs work in Cartesian coordinates and therefore that it is possible to re-express the compressed radial coordinate system in terms of a compressed Cartesian system, x′y′ z′, by removing factors of r′.
Consider the transformation,
r′=R1+r(R2−R1)/R2,θ′=θ,Z′=Z (A12)
or,
We calculate,
so that in the new frame,
for R1<r′<R2
for R2<r′
{tilde over (ε)}r′={tilde over (μ)}r′=r′{tilde over (ε)}r′
{tilde over (ε)}θ′={tilde over (μ)}θ′=r′−1εθ′
{tilde over (ε)}Z′={tilde over (μ)}Z′=r′εZ′ (A15b)
for r′<R1 we may choose any value we please for the dielectric functions since radiation never penetrates into this region.
Alternatively we can reinterpret these values in a Cartesian coordinate frame, x′y′z′, which is easily done by comparison with (A4),
where we have assumed that the starting material is vacuum.
Whilst the theoretical solution has been confirmed by ray-tracing methods, in order to put the invention into effect a suitable material to form the cloaking structure has been developed.
The material parameters of the cloaking structure require that the components of ε′ equal those of μ′, that ε′ and μ′ vary throughout space, and that the tensor components of ε′ and μ′ vary independently. The anticipated material is thus inhomogeneous and anisotropic. Moreover, the material parameters ε′ and μ′ must assume values less than unity and approach zero at the interface between the concealed region and the cloaking shell. Furthermore, it is noted that equation (6) is singular at r′=R1. This is unavoidable as can be seen by considering a ray headed directly towards the center of the sphere 100 (
Metamaterials are artificially constructed ‘materials’ which can exhibit electromagnetic characteristics that are difficult or impossible to achieve with conventional materials. From an electromagnetic point of view, the wavelength, Δ, of a wave passing through a material determines whether a collection of atoms or other objects can be considered a material and properties at the atomic level determine ε and μ. However, the electromagnetic parameters ε and μ need not arise strictly from the response of atoms or molecules: Any collection of objects whose size and spacing are much smaller than Δ can be described by an ε and μ. In that case, the values of ε and μ are determined by the scattering properties of the structured objects. Although such an inhomogeneous collection may not satisfy an intuitive definition of a material, an electromagnetic wave passing through the structure cannot tell the difference, and, from the electromagnetic point of view, we have created an artificial material, or metamaterial. These properties of metamaterials are explained further in “Metamaterials and Refractive Index”, D R Smith, J B Pendry, MCK. Wiltshire, VOL 305, SCIENCE 061081 (2004), which is incorporated herein by reference.
One useful property exhibited by certain metamaterials is that of artificial magnetism. It has been found that structures consisting of non-magnetic arrays of wire loops in which an external field can induce a current consequently produce an effective magnetic response. One such design is the so-called ‘Swiss-roll’ structure, as shown in
One problem with the Swiss-roll structures is that the continuous electrical path provided by metal cylinders can cause the metamaterial to respond like an effective metal when the electric field applied is not parallel to the cylinders, hence restricting its usefulness in certain applications. An adaptation described in the same paper which avoids this undesirable effect is the split ring resonator (SRR). The SRR is built up from a series of split rings, as shown in
As shown in
The unit cell 900 of the stacked SRR structure is shown in
Similarly c can be governed by an array of thin wires as described in “Extremely Low Frequency Plasmas in Metallic Mesostructures”, J B Pendry, A J Holden, W J Stewart, I Youngs, Phys Rev Lett, 76, 4773 (1996) which is incorporated herein by reference.
Hence known techniques can be applied to construct the metamaterial required to put the current invention as described above into practice. The materials comprise many unit cells, each of which is designed to have a predetermined value for ε′ and μ′, such that they correspond to the values determined by equation (4) above (or for the non-orthogonal case, equation G23 above. As will be apparent to the skilled reader, this may involve each unit cell having slightly different values of E′ and to those of its radially neighboring cells. Each unit cell in the metamaterial acts as a concealing volume element. The concealing volume elements are assembled in the correct respective spatial positions to form the cloaking structure, as calculated by the methods outlined above. The cloaking structure will, as a result, possess the spatially distributed material parameter values required for electromagnetic concealment of the enclosed volume.
For practical implementation of the theory outlined above, a three dimensional cloaking structure will be necessary in most cases. A solid composite metamaterial structure can be formed using fabrication techniques similar to those used to manufacture a gradient index lens. One such known structure 1000 is shown in
The unit cell structure of the metamaterial used ensures that anisotropy and continuous variation of the parameters, as required by the theoretical solution, can be achieved. Unrelated to cloaking, another application of the transformation theory described above is a device for concentrating fields.
The resulting material properties of permitting and permeability in the concentration device are then
where the material properties are given relative to the external environment. As with the cloaking structure, the external environment may be free space or any other medium.
In order to concentrate fields into an arbitrarily small volume, we let R1→0 and obtain
If we wish the concentration cross section of the sphere to equal its outer radius, then we let R2→R3.
This is the perfect field concentrator. The material parameters which are required in the concentrator can be achieved through the use of metamaterials as described in relation to the cloaking structure. The permittivity ε and permeability μ can be controlled independently of one another in each of three dimensions within each unit cell of the metamaterial.
The concentrator device is unique, and different from focusing lenses and mirrors, in that it operates on fields incident from any direction. For electromagnetic sensing or energy harvesting applications, a detector or collector would be placed at the core (114) to interact with the intensified fields at that location. Part of the utility of this device is concentration of fields when the direction of their source is initially unknown or constantly changing e.g. solar energy collection or microwave energy beaming on mobile platforms.
A detector placed at the concentrator's core (114) could easily be configured to provide accurate directional information as well as collect the energy. This could be accomplished by, for example, using a spherical shaped detector patterned into eight quadrants. By comparing the energy collected from each quadrant, accurate directional information will be obtained. The detector need not be spherical. A transformation could be used that results in a core region that is a thin circular disk. This would make the concentrator compatible with common planar detectors.
The device can also provide impedance matching to the detector. This is achieved by applying the inverse transformation to the desired detector, expanding it from the core radius, R1, to the radius R2. It is then possible to design an impedance matching layer, (between R1 and R3), to match the transformed detector to its environment. This impedance matching layer is then transformed with the forward transformation expanding it to fill the region (118) between R1 and R3. The resulting shell layer between R1 and R3 provides both concentration and impedance matching functions.
Like the cloak structures the concentrator (110) can be perfectly matched to its environment, so that if the fields are not disturbed in the core (114) by a detector, the device (110) is undetectable by external electromagnetic probing. This device (110) can operate in both near and far field regimes and at any size scale and wavelength. The basic formalism of this transformation can be applied to other basic geometries, (e.g. cylindrical) or applied conformally to an arbitrarily shaped object.
The co-ordinate transfer mapping theory outlined above has been described with respect to diverting the propagation of electromagnetic waves. However it is noted that there is a significant analogy between electromagnetic and other propagating waves such as acoustic waves. In particular, this theory may be applied to obtain specifications for the mechanical properties of a material such as density and stiffness that yield acoustic cloaking. Such a cloak may be used for example to conceal bodies from sonar detection.
Whilst the description of the cloaking theory above is directed mainly to concealing objects, it will be appreciated that the diversion of electromagnetic disturbances from the cloaked volume into a cloaking shell creates an electromagnetic quiet zone inside. Equation (9) dictates that any electromagnetic radiation produced by an object inside the quiet zone will not be able to emerge from it. This may be put to use in electromagnetic interference shielding applications, for example inside Mill machines. Analogously, acoustic quiet zones may also be achieved.
The application of the present invention is not limited to the cloaking and concentrator structures as shown in the Figures. As demonstrated clearly in above, the mathematical solution provided herein applies to cloak a structure of any shape. Furthermore, if a volume is cloaked, an object of any shape or material placed therein will not be detectable by an outside observer, either in reflection mode or transmission mode.
The methods described herein can be used to apply any appropriate coordinate transformation between any appropriate co-ordinate systems and using any appropriate function of the co-ordinates in the original frame. The cloaking structure used to conceal the material within it can be of any shape or thickness. In particular, the cloaking structure does not have to follow the same shape as the object within that is to be concealed. It will be apparent to the skilled reader that the methods described herein can be used to transform all frequencies of electromagnetic radiation, and for a given application can be applied to radiation in any specific frequency range of the electromagnetic spectrum, including infrared, radio, visible light, x-rays, microwaves and radar.
In the examples shown impedance matching has been achieved by the ratio
As will be apparent to the skilled reader, impedance matching of the sort described herein can be achieved for
where m is any real constant value. In particular, the desired ratio of μ/ε will depend on the medium in which the cloaking structure is to be embedded.
The reference J. B. Pendry et al., “Magnetism from Conductors and Enhanced Nonlinear Phenomena,” IEEE Trans. Micro. Theory Tech. 47 (1999), 2074-2084, above incorporated by reference, includes the following text:
C “Swiss Roll” Capacitor
In this instance, we find for the effective permeability
where F is as before the fraction of the structure not internal to a cylinder, and the capacitance per unit area between the first and the last of the coils is
IV. An Isotropic Magnetic Material
. . . . We propose an adaptation of the “split ring” structure, in which the cylinder is replaced by a series of flat disks each of which retains the “split ring” configuration, but in slightly modified form . . . .
The effective magnetic permeability we calculate, on the assumption that the rings are sufficiently close together and that the magnetic lines of force are due to currents in the stacked rings, are essentially the same as those in a continuous cylinder. This can only be true if the radius of the rings is of the same order as the unit cell side. We arrive at
where σ1 is the resistance of unit length of the sheets measured around the circumference.
The reference J. B. Pendry et al., “Extremely Low Frequency Plasmons in Metallic Mesostructures,” Phys. Rev. Lett 76 (1996), 4773-4776, above incorporated by reference, includes the following text:
The plasmons have a profound impact on properties of metals, not least on their interaction with electromagnetic radiation where the plasmon produces a dielectric function of the form
which is approximately independent of wave vector, and the parameter γ is a damping term representing dissipation of the plasmon's energy into the system . . . .
In this Letter we show how to manufacture an artificial material in which the effective plasma frequency is depressed by up to 6 orders of magnitude. The building blocks of our new material are very thin metallic wires . . . .
Having both the effective density, neff, and the effective mass, meff, on hand we can substitute into (1),
Here is the reduction in the plasma frequency promised.
Note in passing that, although the new reduced plasma frequency can be expressed in terms of electron effective mass and charge, these microscopy quantities cancel, leaving a formula containing only macroscopic parameters of the system: wire radius and lattice spacing.
While this invention has been particularly shown and described with references to preferred embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the scope of the invention encompassed by the appended claims
The present application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/459,728, filed on Jul. 25, 2006, the entirety of which is incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20180031354 A1 | Feb 2018 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11459728 | Jul 2006 | US |
Child | 15620683 | US |