Scanning with Mr. Spock's Tricorder Now a Reality

Greg Tito

PR for Dungeons & Dragons
Sep 29, 2005
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Scanning with Mr. Spock's Tricorder Now a Reality



Science has once again replicated a device first seen in fiction.

First there was the cell phone kind of looking and acting like the communicator used by Captain Kirk to speak to the bridge of the Enterprise. Then the iPad basically recreated the device held by Jean-Luc Picard a century later in Star Trek: The Next Generation. Now the tricorder, that boxy device used by Spock to detect anomalies in matter, now has a real-world counterpart in a hyperspectral camera (HSC) developed by scientists at University of Tel Aviv in Israel. The HSC detects up to a thousand different colors of light which are invisible to the naked eye to immediately determine the amount and nature of contaminants, say, in a glass of water.

A sensor interprets sunlight bouncing off of different compounds and reads each compound as a slightly different color. "A combination of absorption or reflection of energy creates the color that the HSR sensor sees," says Prof. Eyal Ben-Dor of TAU's Department of Geography.

The inexpensive handheld HSC has a wildly wide range - from .4 inches to 500 miles - meaning that it can be used in a variety of ways. Relief workers can carry it into problem areas to spot danger, or the HSC could be mounted in a weather balloon to check for leaks in a natural gas pipeline, for instance.

Prof. Ben-Dor believes the device could be used to keep commercial areas, such as marinas and harbors, as clear of contaminants as possible given that most of those areas now are messes of gasoline and oil leaked from boats. "This toxic material sinks, and becomes concentrated on the sediment of the marina, which also contaminates nearby beaches," he says.

The rectangular black box that houses the HSC has many applications for both the environment and scientific experimentation, but if I had one, I would just walk up to random people, make some beeping sounds, and say, "Scanning. Fascinating." Then I would walk away, mysteriously.

Source: Tel Aviv University [http://www.aftau.org/site/News2?page=NewsArticle&id=15471]

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John the Gamer

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May 2, 2010
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It's curious how the thing in the picture looks like it's from the 80's (both device and picture)... Is that even the real device? Because if it is, we might have been had. Let's go check research laboritories just to make sure they haven't been testing teleporters since the late 60's or something. Those intellectual fiends are capable of anything...

 

Quaxar

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Sep 21, 2009
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Ben-Dor? Sounds suspiciously like Bao-Dur from KotOR!

Now somebody just has to finish up the phaser, prefect the replicator and get working on a holodeck and I'll gladly pay for a space ship and crew to boldly go where no man has gone before.
The women's toilet Space!

Soon, my precious lightsaber. Very soon...
 

dfphetteplace

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Nov 29, 2009
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As a firefighter, this sounds awesome. I would be able to tell what kind of HAZMAT scene it is, or maybe even if a fire was arson by sensing accelerants.
 

Raven's Nest

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Feb 19, 2009
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Shame it doesn't have much medical purposes, the X-Prize foundation are offering a 10 million dollar prize [http://www.extremetech.com/extreme/84128-x-prize-offers-10-million-for-a-reallife-star-trek-medical-tricorder] for the team that invents it.

Still, by the sounds of it, this thing is likely to produce far more "intriguing" results with it's potential for gathering data...
 

Quaxar

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Sep 21, 2009
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Raven said:
Shame it doesn't have much medical purposes, the X-Prize foundation are offering a 10 million dollar prize [http://www.extremetech.com/extreme/84128-x-prize-offers-10-million-for-a-reallife-star-trek-medical-tricorder] for the team that invents it.
But... you could already scan urin with it. Maybe do blood tests? It's certainly close!
 

Raven's Nest

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Feb 19, 2009
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Quaxar said:
Raven said:
Shame it doesn't have much medical purposes, the X-Prize foundation are offering a 10 million dollar prize [http://www.extremetech.com/extreme/84128-x-prize-offers-10-million-for-a-reallife-star-trek-medical-tricorder] for the team that invents it.
But... you could already scan urin with it. Maybe do blood tests? It's certainly close!
But not quite the, whip out the device, *scans*... you have third degree burns, radiation poisoning and an egg up your arse, medical tricorder...
 

redisforever

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Oct 5, 2009
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That. Is fucking awesome. I want one. I'll be going to Israel soon to visit my grandparents, maybe I can get one while I'm over...
 

008Zulu_v1legacy

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Sep 6, 2009
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I wonder if it makes the same whirring sounds the one on T.V makes.

I would exercise caution there Greg, some people may not take very well to being probed.
 

Mark D. Stroyer

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Apr 12, 2011
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Raven said:
Shame it doesn't have much medical purposes, the X-Prize foundation are offering a 10 million dollar prize [http://www.extremetech.com/extreme/84128-x-prize-offers-10-million-for-a-reallife-star-trek-medical-tricorder] for the team that invents it.

Still, by the sounds of it, this thing is likely to produce far more "intriguing" results with it's potential for gathering data...
Even in Star Trek, a standard tricorder and a medical tricorder are different pieces of equipment. All those people that haven't taken basic 24th century first-aid get it mixed up all the time. Rookie mistake.
 

Raven's Nest

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Feb 19, 2009
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Mark D. Stroyer said:
Raven said:
Shame it doesn't have much medical purposes, the X-Prize foundation are offering a 10 million dollar prize [http://www.extremetech.com/extreme/84128-x-prize-offers-10-million-for-a-reallife-star-trek-medical-tricorder] for the team that invents it.

Still, by the sounds of it, this thing is likely to produce far more "intriguing" results with it's potential for gathering data...
Even in Star Trek, a standard tricorder and a medical tricorder are different pieces of equipment. All those people that haven't taken basic 24th century first-aid get it mixed up all the time. Rookie mistake.
Really? I watched the whole of TNG and it's movies and didn't pick up on that...
 

Smooth Operator

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Oct 5, 2010
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iPad, really? Let's forget that there were tablet and palm PC's decades before it...

Does seem like a rather miracle machine, but I wonder what the actual accuracy of light spectrum vs chemicals is.
 

Redlin5_v1legacy

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Aug 5, 2009
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Holy crap that sounds awesome. With that, if you were out in the wilderness you'd know what water you could boil up and drink safely and know what water has been contaminated by harmful chemicals.



I know when to buy life insurance now!
 

Mark D. Stroyer

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Apr 12, 2011
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Raven said:
Mark D. Stroyer said:
Even in Star Trek, a standard tricorder and a medical tricorder are different pieces of equipment. All those people that haven't taken basic 24th century first-aid get it mixed up all the time. Rookie mistake.
Really? I watched the whole of TNG and it's movies and didn't pick up on that...
Yup. Really. [http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/Medical_tricorder]

I am heavily utilizing my 'Knows more about Star Trek than the Enterprise computer' badge here, as should be obvious.
 

duchaked

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Dec 25, 2008
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teleporting is still what I want everyday when I'm forced to take the bus...lol sigh