Microwave mirror hits the spot.Microphones and speakers in arrays known as mirrors can reflect and focus sound in a way that shows promise for fighting disease and other uses. Now, scientists have adapted the concept to work with electromagnetic waves See spectrum. Electromagnetic wave A disturbance, produced by the acceleration or oscillation of an electric charge, which has the characteristic time and spatial relations associated with progressive wave motion. , rather than sounds. For more than a decade, Mathias Fink fink Slang n. 1. A contemptible person. 2. An informer. 3. A hired strikebreaker. intr.v. finked, fink·ing, finks 1. To inform against another person. of the Ecole Superieure de Physique physique /phy·sique/ (fi-zek´) the body organization, development, and structure. phy·sique n. The body considered with reference to its proportions, muscular development, and appearance. et de Chimie Industrielles in Paris and his colleagues have developed electronic mirrors that record sound echoes and then replay them in the reverse order of the way they were received. Known as time-reversal acoustics acoustics (ək `stĭks) [Gr.,=the facts about hearing], the science of sound, including its production, propagation, and effects. , the technique focuses the sound energy back to where it originated--a promising strategy for zapping tumors or other ailing tissue, pinpointing irregularities in materials, and funneling communications to selected listeners (SN: 3/15/03, p. 148). The new work at the Paris lab examined electromagnetic signals at wavelengths typical of those of cell phones. A microwave antenna successfully refocused the signals back to the microwave antenna that had emitted them, says Geoffroy Lerosey, a member of the team. The proof-of-principle experiment may pave the way for advances in computer networks, cell-phone communications, and medical treatments. Lerosey, Fink, and their colleagues detail the new development in the May 14 Physical Review Letters Physical Review Letters is one of the most prestigious journals in physics.[1] Since 1958, it has been published by the American Physical Society as an outgrowth of The Physical Review. .--P.W. |
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