• Advanced Photonics
  • Vol. 1, Issue 1, 010502 (2019)

Abstract

Advanced Photonics spoke with Sir John Pendry of Imperial College London, United Kingdom, about the history of transformation optics.

Advanced Photonics spoke with Sir John Pendry of Imperial College London, United Kingdom, about the history of transformation optics.

Advanced Photonics:

How did you come up with the idea of transformation optics?

Sir John Pendry

Figure 1.Sir John Pendry

Advanced Photonics:

What was the optics community response to this idea?

Pendry:

The response to our original 1996 paper was decidedly muted: it still has only 343 citations most of them in the cloaking context. The idea only really burst into prominence after a DARPA meeting in April 2005 on negative index material held in San Antonio. Val Browning, the organizer, suggested that I should ‘ginger things up’ so, it being a military meeting, I decide to show how to make something invisible. My reference to Harry Potter appealed to Val who was the mother of several young children. It was intended as a joke, being only one of very many applications of transformation optics but has subsequently taken on a life of its own.

Advanced Photonics:

How long did it take from the idea to the first published article? Did you have any problems with convincing editors and/or referees?

The electromagnetic invisibility cloak is an example of transformation optics achievements [from Fig. 2 in J. Zhang, J. B. Pendry, and Y. Luo, “Transformation optics from macroscopic to nanoscale regimes,” Adv. Photonics1, 014001 (2019)].

Figure 2.The electromagnetic invisibility cloak is an example of transformation optics achievements [from Fig. 2 in J. Zhang, J. B. Pendry, and Y. Luo, “Transformation optics from macroscopic to nanoscale regimes,” Adv. Photonics1, 014001 (2019)].

Advanced Photonics:

Is transformation optics possible to realize only with metamaterials?

Pendry:

Metamaterials make it easy to implement transformation optics, which often produce rather demanding material parameters hard to realize in natural materials. They certainly were key to the first cloak and helped spread the enthusiasm for cloak-making very widely in the community. But there have been realizations of the technology at optical frequencies using naturally anisotropic materials such as calcite. Shuang Zhang’s group in Birmingham and Baile Zhang in Singapore both produce versions of this type of cloak.

Advanced Photonics:

What advances did the transformation optics approach provide in nanophotonics and metamaterials, which would not be possible otherwise?

Pendry:

As the review [in this issue] attests there have been many applications of transformation optics. My own personal interests have of late focused on how structure radically affects surface plasmons. These surface electron density waves have wavelengths much shorter than the free space wavelength of light and are candidates for subwavelength control of radiation. Transformation optics is a tool ideally suited to understanding and designing novel subwavelength structures—metasurfaces if you like—that control and shape the surface plasmons. It gives both intuitive understanding and at the same time is precise at the level of Maxwell’s equations.

Advanced Photonics:

Is the transformation optics approach specific to electromagnetic waves or can it be exploited in other areas of physics?

Pendry:

It has been fascinating to see the concept spread into many other areas of wave physics, particularly into acoustics, which I am sure will be one of the many areas where practical applications will be found. Sebastien Guenneau has even made a proposal that strategic buildings could be cloaked from earthquakes!

Advanced Photonics:

What practical applications did transformation optics spin off?

Pendry:

As always with a new technology the first practical applications are to relatively mundane problems. So far, people have solved such problems as how to make a sharp bend in a wave guide without any back reflection. This problem is easily and almost trivially solved by transformation optics. There have been applications to ‘spoofing,’ i.e., making an object to be seen as a quite different object on a radar screen. In the optical domain, the technique can reveal many different ways of concentrating light into a nanoscale focus with applications to molecular sensing and to low-power nonlinearity.

Advanced Photonics:

What will be future of transformation optics?

Pendry:

The technology is well on its way to being embedded as a standard design technique for the control of radiation, as well as providing physical insight where waves interact with complex structures.

References