In contrast, the
fiber webs are flexible and lightweight. Plus, a
fiber web in the shape of a sphere can sense the
entire volume of space around it, according to Fink.
"When you're looking at something with your eyes, there's a particular
direction you're looking in," says Ayman Abouraddy a research scientist
in Fink's lab. "The field of view is defined around that direction.
Depending on the lens, you may be able to capture a certain field of
view around that direction, but that's it. Until now, most every optical
system was limited by an optical axis or direction."
In
addition to having an unlimited field of view, the fiber sphere can also
detect the direction of incoming light. Light enters the transparent
sphere at one point and exits at another, providing a directional
reference back to the light source.
Fink's team has also created a flat, two-dimensional web of fibers and
placed two such webs in parallel. These constructs, which can measure
the intensity of incoming light, are capable of generating rough images
of objects placed near them, such as the shape of a letter "E" cut
stencil-like from paper and lit from behind. The image shows up on a
computer screen, reconstructed from a light intensity distribution
measured by the webs.
The fibers used in the webs are about 1 millimeter in diameter. They
consist of a photoconductive glass core with metal electrodes that run
along the length of the core, all surrounded by a transparent polymer
insulator.
The fibers can detect light anywhere along their length, producing a
change in current in an external electrical circuit. While one fiber on
its own cannot detect the exact location of an incoming beam of light,
when many fibers are arrayed in a web, their points of intersection
provide the exact coordinates of the beam. A computer assimilates the
data generated by the web and translates it for the user. If the fibers
were woven into a textile, for instance, an embedded computer could
provide information on a small display screen or even audibly.
Improving the imaging power of the fiber webs will require reducing the
diameter of the fibers and creating denser webs. Fink says he's not
certain whether the new technology will one day replicate human vision.
"Just the idea of imaging with a transparent object is a true eye
opener," he said.
Fink's colleagues on the work are John Joannopoulos, the Francis Wright
Davis Professor of Physics and a member of the Research Lab of
Electronics (RLE), RLE research scientists Ayman Abouraddy and Mehmet
Bayindir (now a faculty member at Bilkent University, Turkey), graduate
students Ofer Shapira of the Department of Electrical Engineering and
Computer Science, and Fabien Sorin, of the Department of Materials
Science and Engineering, RLE research assistant Jerimy Arnold and Dursen
Hinczewski (now at Istanbul Technical University, Turkey). Yigal Migdal
assembled the sphere.
This work is funded by the MIT Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies,
the U.S. Department of Energy, the Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency, and the National Science Foundation.
Source:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Published on 25th
JULY 2006