By using man-made materials -- so-called metamaterials -- researchers have been able to manipulate light's direction and speed and have seemingly rewritten established laws on light refraction, all as part of their quest to develop a "superlens" that could delve deeply into cells and even diagnose diseases in utero. Physicist Costas Soukoulis and his research group at the US Department of Energy’s Ames Laboratory on the Iowa State University campus said they are having the time of their lives making light travel backwards at negative speeds that appear faster than the speed of light, which is 186,000 miles per second -- the speed at which electromagnetic waves can move in a vacuum. And making light seem to move faster than that and in reverse is what Soukoulis said is “like rewriting electromagnetism. Snell’s law on the refraction of light is going to be different; a number of other laws will be different,” he said. Efforts to manipulate the direction and speed of light can't be done with naturally occurring materials and instead have to rely on metamaterials that can be manipulated to respond to electromagnetic waves in ways that natural materials cannot. Natural materials refract light, or electromagnetic radiation, to the right of the incident beam at different angles and speeds. However, metamaterials, also called left-handed materials, make it possible to refract light at a negative angle, so it emerges on the left side of the incident beam. This backward-bending characteristic of metamaterials allows enhanced resolution in optical lenses, which could potentially lead to the development of a flat superlens with the power to see inside a human cell and diagnose disease in an unborn baby. The challenge that Soukoulis and other scientists who work with metamaterials face is to fabricate them so that they refract light negatively at ever smaller wavelengths, with the ultimate goal of making a metamaterial that refracts light at visible wavelengths and creating the much-sought-after superlens. That goal is still a ways off, they said. To date, existing metamaterials operate in the microwave or far-infrared regions of the electromagnetic spectrum. The near-infrared region of the spectrum still lies between the microwave and visible regions, and the wavelengths become ever shorter moving along the electromagnetic spectrum to visible light. Correspondingly, to negatively refract light at these shorter wavelengths requires fabricating metamaterials at extremely small length scales -- a tricky feat. However, recent research by Soukoulis and his co-workers from the University of Karlsruhe in Germany, published in the May 12, 2006, issue of Science, demonstrates they have done just that. “We have fabricated for the first time a metamaterial that has a negative index of refraction at 1.5 micrometers,” said Soukoulis. “This is the smallest wavelength obtained so far.” These wavelengths are microscopic and can be used in telecommunications. Soukoulis’ success moves metamaterials into the near-infrared region of the electromagnetic spectrum -- very close to visible light, superior resolution and a wealth of potential applications, he said. In addition, Soukoulis and his University of Karlsruhe colleagues have also shown that both the velocity of the individual wavelengths, called phase velocity, and the velocity of the wave packets, called group velocity, are both negative, which Soukoulis said accounts for the ability of negatively refracted light to seemingly defy Einstein’s theory of relativity and move backwards faster than the speed of light. “When we have a metamaterial with a negative index of refraction at 1.5 micrometers that can disperse, or separate a wave into spectral components with different wavelengths, we can tune our lasers to play a lot of games with light. We can have a wavepacket hit a slab of negative index material, appear on the right-hand side of the material and begin to flow backward before the original pulse enters the negative index medium,” Soukoulis said. The pulse flowing backward also releases a forward pulse out the end of the medium, he said, a situation that causes the pulse entering the front of the material appear to move out the back almost instantly. “In this way, one can argue that the wave packet travels with velocities much higher than the velocities of light,” said Soukoulis. “This is due to the dispersion of the negative index of refraction; there is nothing wrong with Einstein’s theory of relativity.” For more information, visit: www.external.ameslab.gov