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  • Author Author: Joshua_Evans
  • Date Created: 4 Jul 2012 3:53 PM Date Created
  • Views 173 views
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  • Comments 3 comments
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Researchers reveal 'world's thinnest display'

Joshua_Evans
Joshua_Evans
4 Jul 2012

An international team of researchers have developed innovative new technology that could help consumers to watch films on soap bubbles. In a recent blog post, lead researcher Yoichi Ochiai from the University of Tokyo, explained that the team had discovered a way to project images on a screen made of soap film.

 

To achieve this, the researchers used ultrasonic sound in order to alter the properties of films and create an image. Soap is the main ingredient of this fascinating new approach, according to the research team, who claimed that the display is the world's thinnest transparent screen.

 

"It is common knowledge that the surface of soap bubble is a micro membrane. It allows light to pass through and displays the colour on its structure," he said. "We developed an ultra-thin and flexible BRDF [bidirectional reflectance distribution function, a four-dimensional function defining how light is reflected at an opaque surface] screen using the mixture of two colloidal liquids."

 

Speaking to the BBC, Dr Alexis Oyama from the Carnegie Mellon University explained that the researchers successfully exploited the properties of the film by striking the membrane of the bubbles using ultrasonic sound. Sonic waves, created by playing speakers, are able to alter the texture of a projected image.

 

"Typical screens will show every image the same way, but images should have different visual properties," he said. "For example, a butterfly's wings should be reflective and a billiard ball should be smooth, and our transparent screen can change the reflection in real time to show different textures."

 

He added, in fact, that simply by putting together several bubble screens, consumers will be able to enjoy a 3D image and even a hologram. There are several proposed uses for the new technology, with the research team suggesting that it could be utilized by artists to make their work seem even more realistic.

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  • DAB
    DAB over 10 years ago

    Face it, the smallest screen is still a projection on a flat wall.

    The contrast and clarity is infinately better than you will get from soap bubbles.

     

    Just a thought,

    DAB

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  • DAB
    DAB over 10 years ago

    Face it, the smallest screen is still a projection on a flat wall.

    The contrast and clarity is infinately better than you will get from soap bubbles.

     

    Just a thought,

    DAB

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  • gervasi
    gervasi over 10 years ago in reply to DAB

    I agree with that, BUT one fact about displays is they emit light like a light bulb.  (Or they're like calculator LCD displays and they absorb light.)  Real life has objects that glow and objects that absorb.  If the object is like the moon it doesn't matter that it absorbs b/c it appears to glow without regard to the viewer's movement (at normal walking/driving speeds).  But a book may have a glare at one angle but be easy to read at another angle because angle of incidence = angle of reflection.  The sum of all of these reflections changes as you move around.  Imagine a screen where you could see glare from the sun on an object and them move over a bit and see it disappear.  I'm not sure that's a "feature" people want, but I wonder if part of it could lead to more realistic displays for movies. 

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