3D Animations In Mid-Air Using Plasma Balls 234
An anonymous reader clues us to research at Japan's National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology that has produced the ability to make animations by creating small plasma balls in mid-air. The technology doesn't use vapor or strange gases, just lasers to heat up oxygen and nitrogen molecules above the device: up to 1,000 brilliant dots per second, which makes smooth motion possible. When the tech improves it could be used for street signs or advertising.
Oblig... (Score:5, Funny)
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Sharks? No. Mosquitos? YES! (Score:5, Interesting)
This technology could possibly do that. If it can focus a laser on a particular spot long enough to make plasma out of air, it can zap a skeeter!
And you thought a bug-zapper was entertaining...
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Re:Sharks? No. Mosquitos? YES! (Score:4, Funny)
Heh... it would be fun to take one of these things and set it up near a village of primitives. You could be the face of God
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If we don't actively track and kill mosquitoes with laser beams, then the terrorists have won
Re:Sharks? No. Mosquitos? YES! (Score:5, Funny)
But what we really need is a way to control mosquitos so that they can swarm to form advertisements. Then we'd get the laser bug zapper for free.
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Put me down for a back-order, I'll buy one.
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Other ideas were the same tracking system attached to a nerf gun, a
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I am taking about a frickin' LASER! That zaps skeeters!
Fireworks! Vaporized bugs!
Or, a bug sucker...
Not just a vacuum cleaner (Score:4, Insightful)
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pink tentacle? (Score:5, Funny)
Old news (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Old news (Score:5, Funny)
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http://www.pinktentacle.com/2007/07/aist-improves
Can't wait... (Score:2, Funny)
cool but Yikes! (Score:5, Funny)
Oh yeah, that's a display I want. Instead of the cat blocking the screen, the cat bursts into flames. How the heck am I going to explain that one to the wife?
Re:cool but Yikes! (Score:5, Funny)
I'd say this:
Why do you keep talking about this cat, honey? For the millionth time, we NEVER HAD A CAT. I think you need to see a doctor.
It's a pretty healthy way to help loved ones deal with loss.
oh good, repression.... (Score:2)
Re:cool but Yikes! (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:cool but Yikes! (Score:5, Funny)
Remember the time it fried her cat? And then you lied and said she never had a cat? Then why'd she have the litterbox, Bluesman? Why'd she have the litterbox?
-l
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The cat is imaginary (Score:2)
Re:cool but Yikes! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:cool but Yikes! (Score:5, Funny)
sorry, sorry
Re:cool but Yikes! (Score:5, Funny)
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"Street signs or advertising" (Score:5, Insightful)
Hah, who sees an amazing technology like this and immediately begins thinking about its potential use for advertising? To me, its use in advertising seems like the only downside to this technology..
"Guys!! I just heard that they came up with a way to project images directly in to your brain! Awesome, think of the *commercials*!! "
Re:"Street signs or advertising" (Score:5, Funny)
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What the hell? (Score:4, Funny)
What the hell is that all about? I know that it may be able to swing this in the future but let's not get out of hand. Not to mention that my 12 year old nephew is a better photoshop hacker.
Re:What the hell? (Score:4, Funny)
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I've more or less given up on attempting to understand Japan...
Star Wars (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Star Wars (Score:4, Funny)
Actually, it probably *WILL* burn whatever it hits too!
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Re:Star Wars (Score:4, Informative)
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I for one... (Score:2)
Back to the Future then? (Score:3, Funny)
Street signs and advertising? I THINK NOT! (Score:5, Insightful)
It'll be used for video games and pr0n. We all know who gets tech first. The problem I see is that it heats up they air to the point that when you get too excited and attempt to touch... You loose a hand or other appendage.
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YES, we can finally have a true 3d version of Time Traveller [wikipedia.org]!!
Short on Information (Score:2)
For now, it remains a nifty demonstration, and nothing more.
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Re:Short on Information (Score:4, Interesting)
Also - the current display can make 1000 balls? meh. That's a 10px x 10px x 10px display. It's awesome, sure, but the photoshop jobs they're showing are a LONG way off; right now we're looking more at led scroller type displays.
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Lightsaber anyone? (Score:5, Insightful)
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If you could ionize a short beag, and then hook a stun gun on it, you'd ionize and electrify the beam in that it would probably knock them out.
It would probably take a few thermocouples with a radioactive battery.
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Polluting? (Score:5, Insightful)
As much as I like the idea of being assailed with even more ads everywhere I look, this seems to be a very environmentally harmful idea. Along with harmful gases being produced by plasma discharges, it would be noisy as well, not to mention that displays like this would give off UV light as well, just like an electric arc. Bad idea.
Re:Polluting? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:Polluting? (Score:5, Funny)
*Limit of one etch per mind.
WARNING: Looking directly at the Laser Retinal Projector may cause minor explosions of the eye.
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Wouldn't heating oxygen and nitrogen in air with lasers to the point of making glowing plasma also create ozone and nitric oxides? This sounds like it would be the same as having dozens of electric arcs going off in mid air.
Boy that almost sounds as bad as generating ions just for dubious air purification [sharperimage.com] purposes. Or using nitrogen oxide as a aerosol propellant or packing gas [wikipedia.org].
Really, crying wolf every time someone invents something hurts the cause of environmentalism.
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The UV seems a more likely problem. The only practical solution I can see for the at is a have a glass or plastic barrier between the viewers and the display (might be necessary anyway, since you obviously wouldn't want to touch this display even accidentally) that can block the dangerous frequencies
Stephen Baxter (Score:2)
as an aside, I love his stuff. no one ends a universe quite like him.
demoed at SIGGRAPH 2006 emerging technologies (Score:2)
Very cool, but not likely to be used... (Score:5, Informative)
For one thing, it's loud! Every plasma ball makes a sizzling pop as it winks in and out of existence. Now magnify that by thousands of times as it scans out a 3D wireframe... the entire area for quite a distance surrounding fills with an ear-splitting sound of angry electric bees. There was talk of putting it on buildings to run electronic billboards in cities, but anyone within a few blocks would need ear protection to co-exist with it!
Very cool stuff, but we're a loooong way from 3D open-air advertising.
Some video (Score:5, Informative)
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Tesla Coil + electric guitar = awesome (Score:2)
They could probably do the same with this by changing the rate of the pulses. Though they'd
YouTube video... (Score:5, Informative)
If I'm not mistaken... (Score:3, Interesting)
Whatever! (Score:2)
That's true (Score:4, Insightful)
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Unintended side effects (Score:3, Insightful)
When you heat up an oxygen-nitrogen gas mix to those temperatures, you will get nitrous oxide and ozone. This is not just a problem with cool little sparky devices. Hydrogen-oxygen fuel systems (think: Saturn V) may produce only water vapor, but at such a high temperature from the exhaust, the oxygen-nitrogen atmosphere does its thing and... nothing you'd want to breathe.
And ozone, while very nice for blocking UV rays, is a carcinogen when inhaled.
THE WORLD WILL KILL YOU! film at eleven, Jim Cummings narration.
That being said, I'd certainly love to see a demo. If they can somehow deal with the ozone/NO2 hazard, this could be a blast. "Help me, Obi-Wan, you're my only hope"
Plasma? (Score:2)
This is very, very cool.
And I see it ending very, very badly, for some new Darwin Award recipient.
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Attracting lightening (Score:2, Informative)
Ed Wood (Score:2)
I'm not going near that goddamn thing!
up to 1,000 brilliant dots per second (Score:4, Funny)
Finally, True 3D (Score:2)
here's a youtube video of it in action (Score:3, Informative)
Kind of hard to see what they're doing at first, you might think it's just projected onto the wall, but then the camera pans around and you now see the lights against an open window. Yup, 3D. About at the level of pong right now, monochromatic voxels doing simple stuff, but you can easily extrapolate where they're going to go with it. Return of the Jedi Death Star display within 10 years? I think so.
wow! (Score:2)
I never thought I'd see the light of day that we get "holographic" displays. Of course, this is not holographic, but it's everything the movies portrayed as an imaging device of the future.
Let's hope this develops into something with high resolution, colour and a little less noise
B.
I saw this at SIGGRAPH last year... (Score:2)
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Time for my first ever usage of ye ol' russian joke: On
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Actually the moon has a (Score:2)
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I suspect that these people are smart
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They are also important since it is possible the beam path could suddenly change from a bumped mirror or malfunctioning controller and present the beam to an eye. You couldn't close your eyes fast enough to prevent damage with a high power laser (high enough power and the eye lid won't even help obviously).
The pain in the ass thing about las
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"Also I would like to add everytime something cool comes out like this the article is all good until the bottom where they have to go and say it's good for street signs and advertising"
How else do you expect private enterprise to pay for additional development? One of the first rules of capitalism is this: if it offers no profit, it has no future. Cutting-edge technology tends to be used by either the military, the pr0n industry, or the advertising industry. The latter is the safest to mention in a pub
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No, not really. In a plasma display, the gas discharge is used to excite phosphors that emit light. Just having a glowing ball of gas plasma is going to throw off a *lot* of UV. Think plasma cutter, not plasma TV. Yes, I've got sunburn from using a plasma cutter without gloves.
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