Okay, let me say that I now stand corrected.
What I was thinking about negative index of refraction should in fact have been a positive index of value less than 1 (i.e. implying that lightspeed is faster in the medium than in vacuum). These negative index metamaterials (which, in visible wavelengths, would require nanomachining to produce) have a *negative* index -- which is to say that the velocity of the light becomes, in some sense, *negative*. That is, while the pulse travels forward (at a speed less than the vacuum speed of light, violating no physical laws), the actual *waves* (electric and magnetic field fluctuations) of light travel backward in the material.
Or so claim the experimenters. They also claim, and seem to demonstrate, that a simple flat slab of the stuff (potentially, for visible light, as simple as a thin layer of silver metal) can act as a "superlens" exhibiting negative index and result in focusing an image with resolution smaller than the wavelength; further that it's possible to uncouple the energy and information carried by a light pulse from the EM waves that, in a vacuum, are inextricable.
Does *not* require rewriting special relativity, but *will* require rewriting optics texts, starting about where high school physics leaves off -- and promises to be the instrument of the next generation of Moore's Law in operation, allowing existing fabrication methods to produce another increment of smaller features in microchips, making denser memory, faster CPUs with lower power consumption, and yes, finer CMOS sensors. Of course, finer sensors aren't really an advantage unless the main goal is to make the camera smaller than the already tiny ones we have, but that's a discussion well outside the realm of APUG.
Apropros of *analog* photography, it appears that metamaterial lenses could, in theory, allow a 35 mm camera with a microfilm based emulsion to genuinely record levels of information comparable to what now requires a 4x5 or larger film (though existing lenses and microfilm are capable of approaching that pretty closely). These advances could also lend some additional life to film, or at least some forms of film, allowing a new generation of ultradense micorforms that could continue to compete with electronic storage (especially given the already-proven longevity of archivally processed silver-image microfilms, and the avoidance of the ongoing costs of media migration that creates such a headache for archivists).
Interesting times these continue to be....