Surprising Science: The visibility and invisibility of light

Surprising Science: What do butterflies and invisibility cloaks have in common? 

Light: not only does it underpin life on Earth, it also allows us to see, and for plants and animals to send a multitude of signals to friend and foe. 

But could we also use light to hide?  

Join Professors Devi Stuart-Fox (University of Melbourne) and Dragomir Neshev (Australian National University) as they discuss the many ways light can be manipulated—from colour changing chameleons and the evolution of animal visual signals, to the difficulty of making an invisibility cloak outside the Harry Potter universe.  

They’ll also discuss how the varied ways colour is produced and detected in the animal world are inspiring human inventions, such as metal printing techniques that stem from butterfly wings. 

You’ll be surprised, you’ll be entertained, and you’ll definitely be enlightened.  

Speakers 

Professor Devi Stuart-Fox

Devi Stuart-Fox is a professor at the University of Melbourne's School of Biosciences and co-Chair of the University of Melbourne Hallmark Research Initiative in Bioinspiration. Professor Stuart-Fox studies the biology of light and colour—from optical properties at the nanometre scale to global patterns of colour diversity. She is a strong advocate for interdisciplinary research that draws on solutions from nature to meet the challenges of a sustainable future. Professor Stuart-Fox obtained her PhD at the University of Queensland in 2003 before spending four years at the University of the Witwatersrand in South Africa pursuing postdoctoral research on colour change in chameleons. She won the L’Oreal-UNESCO ‘In the footsteps of Marie Curie’ Special Fellowship for 2013 and Woodward Medal in Science and Technology 2017. Currently she is an Australian Research Council Future Fellow. 

Professor Dragomir Neshev

Dragomir Neshev is a professor in physics at the Australian National University (ANU) and the director of the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Transformative Meta-Optical Systems. He received his PhD from Sofia University, Bulgaria in 1999. Since then, he has worked in the field of optics at several research centres around the world and joined ANU in 2002. He is the recipient of a number of awards, including a Queen Elizabeth II Fellowship (ARC, 2010); an Australian Research Fellowship (ARC, 2004); a Marie-Curie Individual Fellowship (European Commission, 2001); and the Academic award for the best young scientist (Sofia University, 1999). His activities span several branches of optics, including periodic photonic structures, singular optics, plasmonics and optical metasurfaces. 

Event details

Date: Tuesday 13 December
Time: 5.30pm – 7.00pm AEDT (online 6.00pm – 7.00pm AEDT)
Venue: The Shine Dome, Gordon Street Canberra, and online
Cost: $15 in person, free online

This is the sixth and final event in the Surprising Science series. All event recordings can be viewed on the Public Speaker Series page

 

Contact Information

events@science.org.au

5:30 PM December 13, 2022
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Add to Calendar 13/12/2022 5:30 PM 13/12/2022 5:30 PM Australia/Sydney Surprising Science: The visibility and invisibility of light

Surprising Science: What do butterflies and invisibility cloaks have in common? 

Light: not only does it underpin life on Earth, it also allows us to see, and for plants and animals to send a multitude of signals to friend and foe. 

But could we also use light to hide?  

Join Professors Devi Stuart-Fox (University of Melbourne) and Dragomir Neshev (Australian National University) as they discuss the many ways light can be manipulated—from colour changing chameleons and the evolution of animal visual signals, to the difficulty of making an invisibility cloak outside the Harry Potter universe.  

They’ll also discuss how the varied ways colour is produced and detected in the animal world are inspiring human inventions, such as metal printing techniques that stem from butterfly wings. 

You’ll be surprised, you’ll be entertained, and you’ll definitely be enlightened.  

Speakers 

Professor Devi Stuart-Fox

Devi Stuart-Fox is a professor at the University of Melbourne's School of Biosciences and co-Chair of the University of Melbourne Hallmark Research Initiative in Bioinspiration. Professor Stuart-Fox studies the biology of light and colour—from optical properties at the nanometre scale to global patterns of colour diversity. She is a strong advocate for interdisciplinary research that draws on solutions from nature to meet the challenges of a sustainable future. Professor Stuart-Fox obtained her PhD at the University of Queensland in 2003 before spending four years at the University of the Witwatersrand in South Africa pursuing postdoctoral research on colour change in chameleons. She won the L’Oreal-UNESCO ‘In the footsteps of Marie Curie’ Special Fellowship for 2013 and Woodward Medal in Science and Technology 2017. Currently she is an Australian Research Council Future Fellow. 

Professor Dragomir Neshev

Dragomir Neshev is a professor in physics at the Australian National University (ANU) and the director of the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Transformative Meta-Optical Systems. He received his PhD from Sofia University, Bulgaria in 1999. Since then, he has worked in the field of optics at several research centres around the world and joined ANU in 2002. He is the recipient of a number of awards, including a Queen Elizabeth II Fellowship (ARC, 2010); an Australian Research Fellowship (ARC, 2004); a Marie-Curie Individual Fellowship (European Commission, 2001); and the Academic award for the best young scientist (Sofia University, 1999). His activities span several branches of optics, including periodic photonic structures, singular optics, plasmonics and optical metasurfaces. 

Event details

Date: Tuesday 13 December
Time: 5.30pm – 7.00pm AEDT (online 6.00pm – 7.00pm AEDT)
Venue: The Shine Dome, Gordon Street Canberra, and online
Cost: $15 in person, free online

This is the sixth and final event in the Surprising Science series. All event recordings can be viewed on the . 

 

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Contact Information

events@science.org.au

5:30 PM December 13, 2022

© 2024 Australian Academy of Science

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