It has been a desire, if not a dream for many throughout human history, to create a device that allows for seeing through walls (ala Superman), inside the human body or through a shield so that the enemy can be seen without risk. Surprisingly, over the past several years, scientists have begun to find ways to do such things—this week author/journalist Zeeya Merali offers a News Feature in the journal Nature outlining research in this area and where she feels it might be heading.

As Meralis notes, it was just eight years ago that a pair of researchers (Allard Mosk and Ivo Vellekoop) working at the University of Twente in Enschede, the Netherlands found a way to shine a light through an opaque material, igniting a rush by others to investigate their discovery further. Their work, and the work done by others after them is all based on unscrambling that has been scattered after running through a material.

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