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VIDEO: Displaying a sci-fi talent

VIDEO: Displaying a sci-fi talent

via Smithsonian Magazine

This revolutionary idea makes 3D displays look ‘real’

A young man’s keen interest in electronics has won him a ticket to the Google headquarters in California, which next month welcomes 15 science competition finalists.

Chosen from a pool of about 10,000 “curious minds from the four corners of the globe”, Melvin Zammit, 18, will be taking a revolutionary idea of three-dimensional display to the most popular internet search engine’s offices.

The Google Science Fair is an online competition on the lookout for curious people aged between 13 and 18.

Acknowledging not all geniuses are A-grade students, Google encouraged young people with just “an idea” to enrol in its competition.

Mr Zammit, from Kirkop, took up the offer and on July 23 will be representing Malta with an original 3D system made up of multiple transparent images stacked in front of each other displaying ‘real’ 3D imagery. He said: “It all started when I was studying chemistry and I came across salt crystallisation.

“That’s when I realised a 3D image could be composed out of layers, just like in a crystal lattice.

“If an array of LEDs are spun in a circle and switched on and off accordingly, an image would form by illusion. When some of these layers are stacked after each other, you get a 3D display.”

This revolutionary idea makes 3D displays look ‘real’, especially when compared with today’s 3D imagery built on stereoscopic technology, which most often feels unnatural.

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Mr Zammit’s 3D displays produce images similar to holograms in sci-fi films.

Read more . . .

via Times of Malta – Sarah Carabott

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