| Literature DB >> 30886707 |
Tianhang Chen1,2, Bin Zheng1,2, Yihao Yang1,2, Lian Shen1,2, Zuojia Wang1,2, Fei Gao1,2, Erping Li1,2, Yu Luo3, Tie Jun Cui4, Hongsheng Chen1,2.
Abstract
Hiding an arbitrary object with a cloak at a distance from an object is of great significance in scientific research, but remains unrealized as a practical device. In this paper, we propose the first experimental realization of a remote cloaking device that makes any object located at a certain distance invisible at direct current (DC) frequency. A negative resistor network with active elements is used to achieve the remote function of the DC cloak. Based on this network, the cloak can remotely generate a hidden region without distorting the currents far from the cloaked region. The experimental results show that any object in the hidden region is invisible to a DC detector. Our cloak does not require any knowledge of the hidden object. The experimental demonstration shows the superiority of this remote cloaking device, which may find potential applications in medical or geologic research.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30886707 PMCID: PMC6414663 DOI: 10.1038/s41377-019-0141-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Light Sci Appl ISSN: 2047-7538 Impact factor: 17.782
Fig. 1Schematics of two kinds of DC cloaking.
a Conventional cloaking and b remote cloaking
Fig. 2Simulated potential distribution with currents flowing from a point source in three different cases.
a A homogeneous and isotropic background only, b a circular insulator as a hidden object, and c a hidden object with a remote cloak. d The electric potential on the line y = − x − 0.45(m). The purple circles and the orange dashed line represent the cloaking and background cases, respectively, while the red line is for the case of the object only
Fig. 3Simulated equipotential line patterns under different hidden objects or positions.
The center object with a square insulator, b circular good conductor, and c when the source is placed at a different location
Fig. 4Schematic of the effective negative media (resistor).
a Ideal negative resistor. b Equivalent negative resistor by applying the impedance match module. c Simplified two-source module
Fig. 5a Experiment set-up. b–d The measured potential distributions in experiments when currents flow from a point source through the remote cloak with three different objects: b circular insulator, c circular good conductor (PEC), and d square insulator. e The measured electric potential on the line y = x(m) compared with a no-object background. The circle, triangle, and square dashed lines are for the three cloaking cases, respectively