Abstract

Cloning refers to producing copies of objects that cannot be distinguished from the original based on their behavior or response. Here, we present a general methodology to clone objects that scatter acoustic waves and demonstrate it experimentally. We acquire digital twins and bring them back to life—a simple two-step process. First, we place the scattering object in a circular receiver aperture and insonify it from the outside using simple speakers. From the recorded data, which may be reverberative, we retrieve the object's scattering Green's functions for radiation conditions using a technique called multi-dimensional deconvolution. This process recovers the temporal and spatial bandwidth and removes the scattering interactions with the boundaries of the experimentation domain, if present. In the second step, the acoustic scatterer is removed and reconstructed holographically using the acquired scattering Green's functions. The hologram scatters arbitrary incident wavefields in real-time exactly like the original object. Low-latency feedback enables reproducing all orders of wave interactions between physical scatterers and the numerical hologram. The two-step process is demonstrated by cloning several rigid scatterers in a two-dimensional acoustic waveguide. Applications range from fully realistic digital scattering models to efficient meta-material experimentation. [Work supported by SNSF grant 197182.]

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