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"It is significant because it opens up a whole new realm to ideas involving invisibility," McCall said. Researchers at Duke University and in Germany's Karlsruhe Institute of Technology have made progress on making an object appear invisible spatially. The earlier invisibility cloak work bent light around an object in three dimensions. Between those two approaches, the idea of invisibility will work its way into useful technology, predicts McCall, who wasn't part of either team. The science is legitimate, but it's still only a fraction of a second, added City College of New York physicist Michio Kaku, who specializes in the physics of science fiction. "That's not enough time to wander around Hogwarts," Kaku wrote in an email. "The next step therefore will be to increase this time interval, perhaps to a millionth of a second. So we see that there's a long way to go before we have true invisibility as seen in science fiction." Gaeta said he thinks he can get make the cloak last a millionth of a second or maybe even a thousandth of a second. But McCall said the mathematics dictate that it would take too big a machine
-- about 18,600 miles long -- to make the cloak last a full second. "You have to start somewhere and this is a proof of concept," Gaeta said. Still, there are practical applications, Gaeta and Fridman said. This is a way of adding a packet of information to high-speed data unseen without interrupting the flow of information. But that may not be a good thing if used for computer viruses, Fridman conceded. There may be good uses of this technology, Gaeta said, but "for some reason people are more interested in the more illicit applications." ___ Online Nature: http://www.nature.com/nature/
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