All posts by A Futurist at the Movies

A Futurist at the Movies is written by Josh Calder, a futurist living in Washington, DC. For more about Josh, see "Who am I?" or contact him here.

A cloaking device?

Scientists have proposed plans for a kind of Star Trek-style cloaking device: materials that would bend light or other radiation around an area of space, effectively creating an invisibility shield.

The man-made materials are embedded with networks of exceptionally tiny metal wires and loops. The structures refract, or bend, different types of electromagnetic radiation—such as radar, microwaves, or visible light—in ways natural substances can’t.

The theory of metamaterials says that it would be difficult to detect that the light was ever bent around an object; there would not be disturbances revealing that something was being concealed.
Many obstacles stand in the way of practical application. For instance:

So far researchers have only developed metamaterials that divert radar and microwaves—rather than light waves, which are the key to invisibility. While that’s good news for Air Force generals who want to conceal warplanes, it’s bad news for wannabe wizards hoping for a magic cloak. Metamaterials that control visible light are particularly elusive in large part because the required matrix of metal loops and wires must be “nanosize,” or exceptionally small.

The Economist raises an objection on general principle:

Even if it ultimately proved possible to make an aeroplane completely invisible at all wavelengths, there would be a further problem. According to the laws of physics, an invisible person would necessarily be blind. In order to see light, the eye must absorb it, but in order for a person to be invisible, the body must not absorb any light. Thus, a spy plane could not be completely invisible if it were to be used for espionage or, indeed, flown at all, since its pilots would need to know its position relative to the ground.

More here in Book of Joe, especially the comment.

Enhanced humans: new senses

Wired reports on adding senses to the human repertoire.

In primitive experiments, implanted magnets gave people the ability to sense magnetic fields.  Significantly, the project was led by “body-modification artists.”  Body-mod enthusiasts are likely to lead — or at least volunteer for — more sophisticated efforts.

One can imagine attempts to acquire infrared vision or wireless signal perception.

This kind of enhancement is more likely to create “advanced” humans soon than deliberate or accidental genetic routes that have been depicted in movies.

[Via Social Technologies]

No to weather-generating androids!

The X-Men‘s Storm is bad enough, but Elijah J. Brubaker really has objections to Red Tornado, a, err, tornado-making robot. He evaluates the probabilities:

I have a nerdish bone to pick with these comics writers that create robots with powers like this… Making a character a robot immediately implies some sort of science-fictiony s**t is going down right? So having a science fiction character with a power that involves something akin to magic is kind of f****d up. I don’t care how far into the future you travel no one will ever create a robot that has the ability to turn his body into a tornado… it’s not just unlikely, it won’t happen. I think the technology might eventually exist to make a robot into a tornado but god damn it, who would want that?

Who indeed.

(Comics Reporter via a cartoonist friend)

Creating super-senses

Researchers are developing ways to give people superpower-like abilities such as sonar and night vision.

Sensor signals are sent to the brain via an electrode strip on the tongue, enabling people to feel images, including the sound echoes of sonar. The technology could be used to add senses, or replace them. “In testing, blind people found doorways, noticed people walking in front of them and caught balls,” the article says.

The research is funded by the US Defense Department–another sign that people are likely to try to create the enhanced combatants of Soldier, but through non-genetic means.