This document discusses Harry Potter's Invisible Clock, which uses Python for its frontend and backend. It works by using lenses to refract light from the background as it passes through, creating "cloaked regions" where any object placed inside will be invisible while the background remains visible, simulating the effect of an invisibility cloak.
This document discusses Harry Potter's Invisible Clock, which uses Python for its frontend and backend. It works by using lenses to refract light from the background as it passes through, creating "cloaked regions" where any object placed inside will be invisible while the background remains visible, simulating the effect of an invisibility cloak.
This document discusses Harry Potter's Invisible Clock, which uses Python for its frontend and backend. It works by using lenses to refract light from the background as it passes through, creating "cloaked regions" where any object placed inside will be invisible while the background remains visible, simulating the effect of an invisibility cloak.
• A cloak of invisibility is a fictional theme and a device under
some scientific inquiry. • The cloak is capable of hiding three-dimensional objects three to four orders of magnitudes larger than optical wavelengths, and therefore, it satisfies a layman's definition of an invisibility cloak: namely, the cloaking effect can be directly observed without the help of microscopes • Ideally, if we make it real it would work exactly like Harry Potter’s Invisiblity cloak HOW IT WORKS?
• As light reflects off of the background, it refracts as it
passes through the lenses creating "cloaked regions". • When an object is placed inside of a cloaked region, light from the background passes around object causing the background to be visible, rather than the object!