The new lens is flat, distortion-free and so small that more than 1,500 would fit across the width of a human hair -- capable in the future of replacing lenses in applications ranging from cell phones to cameras to fiber-optic communication systems.
In a study published in journal Nano Letters, Federico Capasso and colleagues explained that the lenses used to focus light in eyeglasses, microscopes and other products use the same basic technology dating to the late 1200s, when spectacle lenses were introduced in Europe.
Existing lenses are not thin or flat enough to remove distortions, such as spherical aberration, astigmatism and coma, which prevent the
Image: A girl from the Dhimal tribe, one of India's smallest tribal communities, talks on her mobile phone. | Photograph: Rupak De Chowdhuri/Reuters
Hamilton demands more consistency in title chase
Jewellery consumers shift to gemstones
Brazil beat Argentina with last-gasp Neymar penalty
Messi upstages Ronaldo with Spartak double
SP, BSP to continue 'outside support' to UPA