Scientists have tried this with sophisticated meta-materials, but at
the Vienna University of Technology (TU Vienna) it has now been done
with simple metals; materials with a negative refractive index bend
light the "wrong" way. The effect can be seen just by poking a stick
into the water; at the water surface, the light changes its direction,
the stick appears to be bent. This tilt is described by the refractive
index. For years, scientists have been trying to create special
materials with a negative refractive index – their optical
properties are quite different from those of normal materials.
Researchers at the TU Vienna could now show that even common metals can
have a negative refractive index, if they are placed in a magnetic
field.
Different Kind of Diffraction for Better OpticsWhen we drive a car into the snow at the edge of the road, the wheels
on the road may turn faster than the wheels on the snow. This changes
the direction of the car and it starts skidding. Something quite
similar happens to beams of light that travel through the interface
between two materials, in which light travels at different speeds
– such as air and glass. "The refractive index measures, how
strongly the light is deflected", explains Andrei Pimenov, Professor at
the Institute for Solid State Physics at the TU Vienna. For years there
have been speculations about the properties of possible materials with
a negative refractive index. Entering such a material, light would bend
in the opposite direction. Scientists believe that this could lead to
completely new optical effects and technologies.
Metal Bends LightIt was believed that these effects can only be achieved using so called
"meta-materials". Such materials are constructed from small intricate
structures, which diffract the light in special ways on a microscopic
level. At the TU Vienna, scientists found out that with simple tricks
even quite common metals such as cobalt or iron can exhibit a negative
refractive index. "We place the metal in a strong magnetic field and
irradiate it with light of precisely the correct wavelength", Andrei
Pimenov explains. He uses microwave radiation, which can penetrate thin
foils of metal. Due to magnetic resonance effects in the metal, the
light is bent drastically at the surface. Within the metal, it turns
into the other direction, as if there was a mirror inside the metal.
The Perfect LensRecently, materials with a negative diffractive index have attracted a
great deal of attention, because their peculiar behavior could allow
for completely new kinds of optical lenses. The resolution of regular
lenses is limited by the wave length of light. With long radar waves,
it is impossible to take a picture of a butterfly, with visible light,
nobody can depict an atom. "But using a material with a negative
refractive index, one could theoretically get infinitely high
resolution", says Andrei Pimenov. Being able to use simple metals
instead of complicated meta-materials makes things a lot easier.
However, before optical lenses with a negative refractive index can be
built, scientists have to find ways to compensate for the absorption of
the light in the material.
More information at
http://www.tuwien.ac.at