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This week in California, Berkeley scientists claimed they've come a step closer to developing materials that could make people or objects invisible.
Over the years, many scientists have come up with inventive ways to hide objects from sight (one includes a 3D printer), only the process is certainly much more complex than science fiction makes ...
High-tech cloaking machines could render small objects invisible and perhaps improve military stealth technology.
Cloaking may not be just for Harry Potter. Scientists have made an object invisible. Not to the human eye, just invisible to some kinds of electromagnetic radiation.
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AZoRobotics on MSNPrinceton Scientists Use ‘Invisible’ Robots to Bring Virtual Objects Into the Real World
Princeton's innovative approach combines mixed reality headsets and mobile robots, erasing the digital-physical divide for ...
Mr Ergin's cloak was designed to make objects invisible to infrared light, but it paves the way for more advanced materials capable of cloaking objects in visible wavelengths.
A team of researchers at the University of Texas at Austin have successfully "cloaked a three-dimensional object standing in free space." Not only that, but they've managed to make the object ...
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