Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Scientists develop 3-D image from dust

- SETH BORENSTEIN

WASHINGTON — One of the enduring science-fiction moments of the big screen — R2-D2 beaming a 3-D image of Princess Leia into thin air in Star Wars — is closer to reality thanks to the smallest of screens: dustlike particles.

Scientists have figured out how to manipulate nearly unseen specks in the air and use them to create 3-D images that are more realistic and clearer than holograms, according to a study in Wednesday’s journal Nature. The study’s lead author, Daniel Smalley, said the new technology is “printing something in space, just erasing it very quickly.”

In this case, scientists created a small butterfly appearing to dance above a finger and an image of a graduate student imitating Leia in the

Star Wars scene.

Even with all sorts of holograms already in use, this new technique is the closest to replicatin­g that Star Wars scene.

“The way they do it is really cool,” said Curtis Broadbent, of the University of Rochester, who wasn’t part of the study but works on a competing technology. “You can have a circle of people stand around it and each person would be able to see it from their own perspectiv­e. And that’s not possible with a hologram.”

The tiny specks are controlled with laser light, like the fictional tractor beam from Star Trek, said Smalley, an electrical engineerin­g professor at Brigham Young University. Yet it was a different science fiction movie that gave him the idea: The scene in the movie Iron Man when the Tony Stark character dons a holographi­c glove. That couldn’t happen in real life because Stark’s arm would disrupt the image.

Going from holograms to this type of technology — technicall­y called volumetric display — is like shifting from

a two-dimensiona­l printer to a 3-D printer, Smalley said. Holograms appear to the eye to be 3-D, but “all of the magic is happening on a 2-D surface,” Smalley said.

The key is trapping and moving the particles around potential disruption­s so the “arm is no longer in the way,” Smalley said.

Initially, Smalley thought gravity would make the particles fall and make it impossible to sustain an image, but the laser light energy changes air pressure in a way to keep them aloft, he said.

Other versions of volumetric display use larger “screens” and “you can’t poke your finger into it because your fingers would get chopped off,” said Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology professor V. Michael Bove, who wasn’t part of the study team but was Smalley’s mentor.

The device Smalley uses is about one-and-a-half times the size of a children’s lunchbox, he said.

So far the projection­s have been tiny, but with more work and multiple beams, Smalley hopes to have bigger projection­s.

This method could one day be used to help guide medical procedures — as well as for entertainm­ent, Smalley said. It’s still years away from daily use.

 ?? AP/DAN SMALLEY LAB, BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY ?? An image of researcher Erich Nygaard is projected recently in Provo, Utah, in much the same way an image of Princess Leia was beamed by R2-D2 in Star Wars.
AP/DAN SMALLEY LAB, BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY An image of researcher Erich Nygaard is projected recently in Provo, Utah, in much the same way an image of Princess Leia was beamed by R2-D2 in Star Wars.
 ?? AP/DAN SMALLEY LAB, BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY ?? An image of the earth is projected above a fingertip by Brigham Young University scientists in Provo, Utah, recently.
AP/DAN SMALLEY LAB, BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY An image of the earth is projected above a fingertip by Brigham Young University scientists in Provo, Utah, recently.

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