Since ancient times, people have experimented with light, cherishing shiny metals like gold and cutting gemstones to brighten their sparkles. Today we are far more advanced in how we work with this ...
Sometimes when you look into a swimming pool it’s difficult to tell how deep the water actually is. If you grab something long, like a stick, you can use it to test the depth of the water. Upon ...
When light travels from one substance to another, such as from air to water, it can appear bent due to refraction. This occurs because light travels at different speeds in different materials. When ...
For the first time, scientists have demonstrated that negative refraction can be achieved using atomic arrays - without the need for artificially manufactured metamaterials. Scientists have long ...
The first law of refraction states that the incident rays, refracted rays, and the normal to the interface at the point of incidence, all lie in the same plane. The ratio of the sine of the angle of ...
Thomas Vandervelde receives funding from the National Science Foundation, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, the Office of Naval Research, the Intelligence Community, the Alexander Von ...