Tangilbe Hologram | |||||||||||||||||
While watching a few videos of 3D holograms that a few companies have created (io2 technology, for commercial sale even), I wondered just how far you could take that idea. Would it be possible to adhere particles to the light that the hologram displays. I know light is not magnetic in the conventional sense, but the Faraday effect accounts for transparent dielectric materials having ferromagnetic resonance. Could a computer user download a holographic image and one day be able touch it or even hold it. I'm not too sure on all the science, so I'd appreciate some educated reviews. As an engineering student this stuff interests me.
vandyman, Jan 28 2009
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The science of haptics may have some relevance to your interest. A site at http://www.informit.com/articles/article.aspx?p=361412&seqNum=5 might be helpful.
That is interesting. I am sure that there is a way to achieve that. May be not in the near future but once the market is there.
Hello,isn't hologram just a projection assisted with light only three dimension??? maybe I watch too much TV.
instead of particles in the hologram, why not just have your hologram set up to interact with a sonar device that detects your hand movements as they pass near a hologram? the tech is already out there, someone should just apply it.