Low-loss directional cloaks without superluminal velocity or magnetic response.

Abstract

The possibility of making an optically large (many wavelengths in diameter) object appear invisible has been a subject of many recent studies. Exact invisibility scenarios for large (relative to the wavelength) objects involve (meta)materials with superluminal phase velocity [refractive index (RI) less than unity] and/or magnetic response. We introduce a new approximation applicable to certain device geometries in the eikonal limit: piecewise-uniform scaling of the RI. This transformation preserves the ray trajectories but leads to a uniform phase delay. We show how to take advantage of phase delays to achieve a limited (directional and wavelength-dependent) form of invisibility that does not require loss-ridden (meta)materials with superluminal phase velocities.

DOI
10.1364/ol.37.004471
Year
Chicago Citation
Urzhumov, Yaroslav, and David R. Smith. “Low-loss directional cloaks without superluminal velocity or magnetic response.” Optics Letters 37, no. 21 (November 2012): 4471–73. https://doi.org/10.1364/ol.37.004471.