2 comments

  • msteffen 2 hours ago
    I had to do a lot of googling before I sort of understood this, so for future readers: these people figured out how to create tiny lenses using the same photolithography machines that are used currently used to create microchips (I-line stepper. I-line refers to a specific wavelength of UV light—365nm, and the stepper is the machine that focuses it on the silicon wafer)
    • Onavo 1 hour ago
      More metamaterial lenses on the way?
  • momoschili 47 minutes ago
    Not clear to me where the novelty is in this... people have been doing similar stuff for ages, and the performance of the optics here leaves a bit to be desired as well.

    Sure we can mass produce these, but we can also mass produce wafer-scale lenses, and in any serious application, a normal metamaterial lens would justify the higher cost with its performance

    • s0rce 26 minutes ago
      Seems like simpler fabrication but not sure why they can't just make a master and then stamp/pattern these at scale like how gratings are manufactured.
      • momoschili 20 minutes ago
        you definitely can and people definitely do this. There are arguments that stamp patterning is better suited for optics as well - specifically point defects seem to be less deleterious and that the feature shapes (not sizes) are more readily done via stamps. However, typically a lot of semiconductor manufacturing is viewed from an electronics perspective today, where stamping is definitely considered an inferior process.