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New Journal of Physics 8, 248 (2006) 19 p.
On cloaking for elasticity and physical equations with a transformation invariant form
Graeme W. Milton 1, Marc Briane 2, 3, John R. Willis 4
(2006)

In this paper, we investigate how the form of the conventional elastodynamic equations changes under curvilinear transformations. The equations get mapped to a more general form in which the density is anisotropic and additional terms appear which couple the stress not only with the strain but also with the velocity, and the momentum gets coupled not only with the velocity but also with the strain. These are a special case of equations which describe the elastodynamic response of composite materials, and which it has been argued should apply to any material which has microstructure below the scale of continuum modelling. If composites could be designed with the required moduli then it could be possible to design elastic cloaking devices where an object is cloaked from elastic waves of a given frequency. To an outside observer it would appear as though the waves were propagating in a homogeneous medium, with the object and surrounding cloaking shell invisible. Other new elastodynamic equations also retain their form under curvilinear transformations. The question is raised as to whether all equations of microstructured continua have a form which is invariant under curvilinear space or space-time coordinate transformations. We show that the non-local bianisotropic electrodynamic equations have this invariance under space-time transformations and that the standard non-local, time-harmonic, electromagnetic equations are invariant under space transformations.
1:  Department of Mathematics
University of Utah
2:  Département de Mathématiques
Institut National des Sciences Appliquées (INSA) - Rennes
3:  Institut de Recherche Mathématique de Rennes (IRMAR)
CNRS : UMR6625 – Université de Rennes 1 – École normale supérieure de Cachan - ENS Cachan – Institut National des Sciences Appliquées (INSA) : - RENNES – Université de Rennes II - Haute Bretagne
4:  Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics
University of Cambridge
Mathematics/Numerical Analysis