A researcher at the defense company Boeing has filed a patent for a sci-fi-esque cloaking device that would protect soldiers from intense shock waves generated by explosions.
The just-issued patent (No. 8,981,261) to Boeing envisions stopping shock waves using a veil of heated, ionized air. Such a "shield" would damp the force of explosions. It doesn't build an invisible wall of force, but rather makes shock waves bend around objects, just as some high-tech materials bend light and make things invisible.
...
That arc heats and ionizes, or charges, particles of air. The heated air would work as a shield by changing the speed at which shock waves travel, and therefore bending them around a protected soldier, Tillotson said.Sound waves (and other wave types) propagate faster in hot air, Tillotson said. For that reason, the shock wave would speed up when it hits the heated air around the electrical discharge. As the shock wave speeds up, it would change direction slightly, or refract, away from the person or object behind the arc. That bending occurs because of the change in speed of the wave, and the shape of the area of hot air the shock wave hits determines the exact direction.
Military considerations aside, it's an interesting idea that fits conceptually within the topic of metamaterials that are being explored to bend light and sound around objects.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 16 2015, @02:50PM
Oops, how did that post end up on the wrong story? I'm certain that I was an the right one while writing that post (heck, I even copy/pasted from its display above the input box!)
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 16 2015, @02:54PM
Actually I now notice that the story I replied to seems to be gone completely!?
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 16 2015, @02:59PM
Ah, now I notice … the "story" I was replying to was actually a comment, which was downvoted for being offtopic and thus stopped being displayed. I got confused.
Maybe the main page and the comments should get a slightly different design, so as to avoid this type of confusion.