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“We refer to this colloquially as the Princess Leia project,” Smalley said. “Our group has a mission to take the 3D displays of science fiction and make them real. We have created a display that can do that.”
First things, first, Smalley says. The image of Princess Leia is not what people think it is: It’s not a hologram. A 3D image that floats in air, that you can walk all around and see from every angle, is actually called a volumetric image. Examples of volumetric images include the 3D displays Tony Stark interacts with in "Iron Man" or the massive image-projecting table in "Avatar."
A holographic display scatters light only at a 2D surface. If you aren’t looking at that surface, you won’t see the 3D image because you must be looking at the scattering surface to see the image. A volumetric display has little scattering surfaces scattered throughout a 3D space — the same space occupied by the 3D image — so if you are looking at the image you’re are also looking at the scatters. For this reason, a volumetric image can be seen from any angle.
The technique, described in Nature on 24 January1, works more like a high-speed Etch a Sketch: it uses forces conveyed by a set of near-invisible laser beams to trap a single particle — of a plant fibre called cellulose — and heat it unevenly. That allows researchers to push and pull the cellulose around. A second set of lasers projects visible light — red, green and blue — onto the particle, illuminating it as it moves through space. Humans cannot discern images at rates faster than around 10 per second, so if the particle is moved fast enough, its trajectory appears as a solid line — like a sparkler moving in the dark. And if the image changes quickly enough, it seems to move. The display can be overlaid on real objects and viewers can walk around it in real space.
It is at the beginning stages of development but who cares! They already have some funding and will continue to make improvements. What clever little monkeys!
originally posted by: FamCore
a reply to: gortex
I wonder how long it will be until we have either
A) Robot AI that look like humans (skin, hair, etc.) that are charismatic and "lifelike" enough to trick the human race into thinking that they are human, and they begin running for public office in order to annihilate all humans, or
B) Humans whose mind and "consciousness" have been transferred into something like these holograms, who then can run for public office acting as if they "are actually human, but without the body"
On topic - very cool development in the fields of optics and science in general
originally posted by: interupt42
a reply to: TEOTWAWKIAIFF
It is at the beginning stages of development but who cares! They already have some funding and will continue to make improvements. What clever little monkeys!
They need to give it to p0rnhub so we can get the tech done by next week.
B) Humans whose mind and "consciousness" have been transferred into something like these holograms, who then can run for public office acting as if they "are actually human, but without the body"
originally posted by: Elementalist
originally posted by: interupt42
a reply to: TEOTWAWKIAIFF
It is at the beginning stages of development but who cares! They already have some funding and will continue to make improvements. What clever little monkeys!
They need to give it to p0rnhub so we can get the tech done by next week.
Uhh What? Where's your head mate.
@op I love seeing real technological developments in the public domain. The things our species should be focusing on and making advancements in the different sectors of science.
All the politics can go away, we need real news and hopes for a better future. Though this development is small it has huge implications for future applications.
originally posted by: ufoorbhunter
a reply to: gortex
An advertisers dream. Just imagine all the McDonalds and Burger King logos everywhere, we'll be wading past them. Blinded by them. It gonna make TV advertising look old fashioned now they can get to us anytime, all the time, anywhere. Help!