|
Subscribe to Physics
News Update
Back to
Physics News Update |
Number 628 #1, March 13, 2003
by Phil Schewe, James Riordon, and Ben Stein
Left Handed Materials
Left handed materials (LHM), materials with a negative index of
refraction, can in principle focus light without the need for curved
surfaces. The first observation of such a "meta-material" (consisting of
alternating layers of metal rods and "C" shaped rings lodged on a
honeycomb array of printed circuit boards) came three years ago (see Update
476). Then some theorists said it couldn't be done. Now scientists
at several labs say it can be done. At last week's meeting of the
American Physical Society (APS) in Austin, Texas, two labs reported
devising LHMs of their own and demonstrating a negative-index behavior
when microwaves were sent into a wedge-shaped LHM "prism." A group from
MIT (represented at the meeting by Andrew Houck) said that microwaves
entered an LHM sample and, sure enough, the light waves were refracted
according to Snell's law, the classic equation for prescribing what
happens when light goes from one medium into another, but with a
negative sign. The MIT experiment also provides evidence that light from
a point source can be focused with a flat rectangular slab of LHM
material (see also Houck et al., upcoming article in Physical
Review Letters). Patanjali Parimi (Northeastern Univ.) also reported
at the meeting that his team of scientists had observed negative-index
propagation on microwaves through a LHM sample (for background and some
simple movies, see http://sagar.physics.neu.edu/).
Two theorists present at the meeting, Clifford Krowne (Naval Research
Lab) and Alexandre Pokrovski (Univ. Utah), affirmed that the
experimental results had indeed established the existence of working
left handed meta-materials but that an earlier criterion thought
necessary for LHM behavior, namely that the material's permittivity (a
measure of the material's response to an applied electric field) and its
permeability (a measure of the material's response to an applied
magnetic field) both had to be negative, was not strictly required.
Potential applications in the cell-phone industry alone are many: LHM
devices would be handy for filtering, steering, and focusing microwaves.
Furthermore, one would expect novel optical effects if negative
index-of-refraction materials could be extended into the visible light
range.
Back to Physics News
Update |