Date: 3/06/2016 20:58:06
From: Spiny Norman
ID: 902211
Subject: Flat lens promises possible revolution in optics

A flat lens made of paint whitener on a sliver of glass could revolutionise optics, according to its US inventors.

Just 2mm across and finer than a human hair, the tiny device can magnify nanoscale objects and gives a sharper focus than top-end microscope lenses.

It is the latest example of the power of metamaterials, whose novel properties emerge from their structure.

Shapes on the surface of this lens are smaller than the wavelength of light involved: a thousandth of a millimetre.

“In my opinion, this technology will be game-changing,” said Federico Capasso of Harvard University, the senior author of a report on the new lens which appears in the journal Science.

The lens is quite unlike the curved disks of glass familiar from cameras and binoculars. Instead, it is made of a thin layer of transparent quartz coated in millions of tiny pillars, each just tens of nanometres across and hundreds high.

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Date: 3/06/2016 21:52:06
From: dv
ID: 902230
Subject: re: Flat lens promises possible revolution in optics

Very interesting

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Date: 4/06/2016 04:49:36
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 902388
Subject: re: Flat lens promises possible revolution in optics

I see that this is quite different to the two other types of flat lenses that I’m familiar with, different from the macroscale Fresnel flat lens, and different from the microscale is of millions of tiny lenses used in optical sensors.

Instead, being a metamaterial lens operating on the nanoscale, this has strong similarities to the negative-refractive-index metamaterial lens developed earlier. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Split-ring_resonator_array_10K_sq_nm.jpg

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Date: 7/06/2016 07:36:25
From: Spiny Norman
ID: 903839
Subject: re: Flat lens promises possible revolution in optics

Youtube vid of it

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