• Home
  • Science
  • Technology
  • Futurism
  • Weather Extreme

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

English TikToker who’s set up home in America reveals ‘the things that make no sense to a Brit’

June 2, 2023

Funding for cloud-based generative AI

June 2, 2023

NJ’s largest wildfire in 2023 still burning Friday at Bass River State Forest; several Garden State Parkway exits closed due to heavy smoke

June 2, 2023
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube
Futurist JournalFuturist Journal
Demo
  • Home
  • Science
  • Technology
  • Futurism
  • Weather Extreme
Futurist JournalFuturist Journal
Home » Smart Material Prototype Challenges Newton’s Laws of Motion
Latest Science

Smart Material Prototype Challenges Newton’s Laws of Motion

NewsBy NewsMay 19, 2023Updated:May 19, 2023No Comments3 Mins Read0 Views
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

A prototype innovative metamaterial with unconventional properties employs electrical signals to control the direction and intensity of energy waves traversing a solid. This innovative metamaterial, characterized by odd mass density, presents a divergence from Newton’s second law, as force and acceleration do not go in the same direction. Huang envisions wide-ranging applications from military and commercial uses, such as controlling radar waves or managing vibration from air turbulence in aircraft, to civil uses like monitoring the health of structures like bridges and pipelines.

University of Missouri researchers designed a prototype of a small, lightweight active ‘metamaterial’ that can control the direction and intensity of energy waves.

Professor Guoliang Huang of the University of Missouri has developed a prototype metamaterial that can control the direction and intensity of energy waves using electrical signals. The innovative material has potential applications in the military and commercial sectors, and can also be used to monitor the structural health of bridges and pipelines.

For more than 10 years, Guoliang Huang, the Huber and Helen Croft Chair in Engineering at the University of Missouri, has been investigating the unconventional properties of “metamaterials” — an artificial material that exhibits properties not commonly found in nature as defined by Newton’s laws of motion — in his long-term pursuit of designing an ideal metamaterial.

Huang’s goal is to help control the “elastic” energy waves traveling through larger structures — such as an aircraft — without light and small “metastructures.”

Prototype Metamaterial Uses Electrical Signals To Control Energy Waves

The prototype metamaterial uses electrical signals transported by these black wires to control both the direction and intensity of energy waves passing through a solid material. Credit: University of Missouri

“For many years I’ve been working on the challenge of how to use mathematical mechanics to solve engineering problems,” Huang said. “Conventional methods have many limitations, including size and weight. So, I’ve been exploring how we can find an alternative solution using a lightweight material that’s small but can still control the low-frequency vibration coming from a larger structure, like an aircraft.”

Guoliang Huang

Guoliang Huang. Credit: University of Missouri

Now, Huang’s one step closer to his goal. In a new study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) on May 18, Huang and colleagues have developed a prototype metamaterial that uses electrical signals to control both the direction and intensity of energy waves passing through a solid material.

Potential applications of his innovative design include military and commercial uses, such as controlling radar waves by directing them to scan a specific area for objects or managing vibration created by air turbulence from an aircraft in flight.

“This metamaterial has odd mass density,” Huang said. “So, the force and acceleration are not going in the same direction, thereby providing us with an unconventional way to customize the design of an object’s structural dynamics, or properties to challenge Newton’s second law.”

This is the first physical realization of odd mass density, Huang said.

“For instance, this metamaterial could be beneficial to monitor the health of civil structures such as bridges and pipelines as active transducers by helping identify any potential damage that might be hard to see with the human eye.”

Reference: “Active metamaterials for realizing odd mass density” by Qian Wu, Xianchen Xu, Honghua Qian, Shaoyun Wang, Rui Zhu, Zheng Yan, Hongbin Ma, Yangyang Chen and Guoliang Huang, 18 May 2023, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2209829120

Other MU contributors include Qian Wu, Xianchen Xu, Honghua Qian, Shaoyun Wang, Zheng Yan and Hongbin Ma. Grants from the Air Force Office of Scientific Research and the Army Research Office funded the research.

Source

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
News
  • Website

Related Posts

NASA plays hide-and-seek with unrelenting Mars helicopter Ingenuity

June 2, 2023

First-Ever X-Ray of a Single Atom Captured

June 2, 2023

How to Watch the First-Ever Livestream Beamed Down From Mars

June 1, 2023

Webb telescope spies giant plume on Saturn’s moon Enceladus

June 1, 2023

There may be hundreds of millions of habitable planets in the Milky Way, new study suggests

June 1, 2023

Rocks Beneath Antarctic Ice Sheet Reveal Surprising Past

June 1, 2023

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Recent Posts
  • English TikToker who’s set up home in America reveals ‘the things that make no sense to a Brit’
  • Funding for cloud-based generative AI
  • NJ’s largest wildfire in 2023 still burning Friday at Bass River State Forest; several Garden State Parkway exits closed due to heavy smoke
  • NASA plays hide-and-seek with unrelenting Mars helicopter Ingenuity
  • Diablo 4’s first hotfix is already here – here’s the changes
Recent Comments
    Demo
    Top Posts

    Chinese granny finds online fame for depiction of elderly loneliness

    December 4, 20219 Views

    Starbucks Teases Web 3 Platform in NFT Announcement

    May 4, 20225 Views

    Pandas AI: The Generative AI Python Library

    May 16, 20234 Views
    Don't Miss

    English TikToker who’s set up home in America reveals ‘the things that make no sense to a Brit’

    June 2, 2023

    Melissa Herrera is originally from Norfolk but moved to South Carolina in August 2021Moving from…

    Funding for cloud-based generative AI

    June 2, 2023

    NJ’s largest wildfire in 2023 still burning Friday at Bass River State Forest; several Garden State Parkway exits closed due to heavy smoke

    June 2, 2023

    NASA plays hide-and-seek with unrelenting Mars helicopter Ingenuity

    June 2, 2023
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews
    Demo
    Most Popular

    Chinese granny finds online fame for depiction of elderly loneliness

    December 4, 20219 Views

    Starbucks Teases Web 3 Platform in NFT Announcement

    May 4, 20225 Views

    Pandas AI: The Generative AI Python Library

    May 16, 20234 Views
    Our Picks

    English TikToker who’s set up home in America reveals ‘the things that make no sense to a Brit’

    June 2, 2023

    Funding for cloud-based generative AI

    June 2, 2023

    NJ’s largest wildfire in 2023 still burning Friday at Bass River State Forest; several Garden State Parkway exits closed due to heavy smoke

    June 2, 2023
    Editor's Pick

    ‘Frightening’: record-busting heat and drought hit Europe in 2022 | Climate crisis

    April 20, 2023

    Linux 6.4 To Remove Old Workaround For Running On Very Outdated Distributions

    March 12, 2023

    Call of Duty Zombies Fans Share Changes They Want To See If Outbreak Returns In Vanguard

    August 22, 2021
    Futurist Journal
    Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest YouTube Dribbble
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    © 2023 futuristjournal.com - All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.