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The stakes are high in computer graphics, thanks to a growing number of three-dimensional applications ranging from games to Google Earth.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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Recently, researchers writing in Physical Review B suggested that arranging a number of tiny cloaks in a two-dimensional grid could be put to use in biomedicine and sensing, as well as traditional camouflage.
BBC: 'Cloaking' idea traps a rainbow
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It was already known that six is the minimum number of water molecules needed to form a three-dimensional structure.
ECONOMIST: Molecular bonding