Physical limitations on broadband invisibility based on fast-light media
Mohamed Ismail Abdelrahman, Zeki Hayran, Aobo Chen, Francesco, Monticone

TL;DR
This paper critiques a recent proposal claiming broadband invisibility cloaks using fast-light media, arguing that fundamental physical principles impose bandwidth limits and that the proposed model is unphysical.
Contribution
It provides a critical analysis showing that causality and stability impose fundamental limits on fast-light cloaks, challenging the feasibility of broadband invisibility as claimed.
Findings
Fast-light media cannot achieve broadband invisibility due to causality constraints.
The material model used in the original proposal is physically unfeasible.
Stability issues prevent practical implementation of such cloaks.
Abstract
This note is a comment on a recent article [Tsakmakidis, et al., Nat Commun 10 (2019)] that presents a thought-provoking proposal to overcome the bandwidth restrictions of invisibility cloaks based on using media that support superluminal (faster than light in free space) group and phase velocities. As illustrated in Fig. 1 of the original article, a wave packet propagating through such a fast-light cloak is alleged to be able to reach the side behind the cloaked object simultaneously with a corresponding wave packet propagating through the shorter, direct route in free space without the object, so that "no shadow or waveform distortion arises." As the authors claim, the "extra pathlength is balanced out by the correspondingly larger group velocity of the pulse in the cloak", which allows to "restore the incident field distribution all around the object in, both, amplitude and phase".…
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