2019
DOI: 10.1038/d41586-019-03454-y
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Star Wars-style 3D images created from single speck of foam

Abstract: ith the tap of a keyboard, Ryuji Hirayama brings a listless foam bead to life. The white speck jumps up and hovers with perfect stillness in space. Another tap, and the dot transforms into a luminous butterfly-like shape, which flaps its wings as it circles inside a black box. Diego Martinez Plasencia, Hirayama's colleague at the University of Sussex in Brighton, UK, reaches into the box to show that there are no strings. The effect seems to be pure magic. "I showed it first to my daughters. They were like-'wo… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Volumetric display, an umbrella term for many different techniques, renders volume-filling 3D images via the generation, absorption, and scattering of illumination in a confined space, e.g., a cube or cone (Yang et al, 2016). The study of volumetric display is active with exciting experiments (Smalley et al, 2018), and commercial products are also available (Gibney, 2019). Other approaches to imitate 3D display include the use of multiple projectors and a human-size retroreflective cylinder (Gotsch et al, 2018).…”
Section: Conceptmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Volumetric display, an umbrella term for many different techniques, renders volume-filling 3D images via the generation, absorption, and scattering of illumination in a confined space, e.g., a cube or cone (Yang et al, 2016). The study of volumetric display is active with exciting experiments (Smalley et al, 2018), and commercial products are also available (Gibney, 2019). Other approaches to imitate 3D display include the use of multiple projectors and a human-size retroreflective cylinder (Gotsch et al, 2018).…”
Section: Conceptmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Volumetric display, an umbrella term for many different techniques, renders volume-filling 3D images via the generation, absorption, and scattering of illumination in a confined space, e.g., a cube or cone [157]. The study of volumetric display is active with exciting experiments [158], and commercial products are also available [159]. Other approaches to imitate 3D display include the use of multiple projectors and a human-size retroreflective cylinder [160].…”
Section: Holography and Holographic Communicationmentioning
confidence: 99%