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'Star Trek' Tricorder Inspires Real-World Device

Peterjansentricorder

First Posted: 04/13/2012 4:56 pm Updated: 06/13/2012 5:12 am


By Frank Simons

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Starships, warp speed, transporters, phasers. Think "Star Trek" technology is only the stuff of fiction? Think again.

Dr. Peter Jansen, a PhD graduate of the Cognitive Science Laboratory at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, has developed a scientific measurement device based on the tricorders used by Captain Kirk, Spock, Dr. McCoy and other space adventurers on the classic TV series that has spawned numerous spin-offs in more than 45 years.

"Star Trek inspired me to be a scientist" said Jansen, who has been formally working on his tricorder prototypes since 2007, but toying with the idea of making a functioning device since he was "a kid in high school."

The 29-year-old Jansen's school days spanned the late 1990s when "Star Trek: Voyager" was on the air. It featured his favorite tricorder, a model with screens on top and bottom.

The first tricorder appeared on the original show's initial episode in 1966, when Capt. Kirk swaggered toward audiences with his phaser weapon holstered to his side but a tricorder in his hand. The hand-held devices for data sensing, analysis and recording, have been a part of "Star Trek" ever since.

But if Jansen, a self-confessed "addicted maker" of things, is successful at developing, testing and bringing his instrument into the public, the tricorder may not be just the stuff of "Star Trek" prop rooms. It may be used for real.

Jansen said his tricorder can take atmospheric measurements, or ambient temperature, pressure or humidity. It can take electromagnetic measurements to test magnetic fields, and it can make spatial measurements of distance, location, or motion.

Fascinating, as Spock might say.

Jansen thinks of his tricorder as a "general tool" -- a kind of "Swiss Army Knife" -- with practical uses in building inspection, for instance, where it might help taking temperature and humidity readings or be a distance sensor to measure rooms.

It resembles the device carried by countless "Away Team" members in "Star Trek - The Next Generation" - his favorite of the "Star Trek" shows, he notes.

NO SCIENCE FICTION

No independent group has yet verified his claims for the device which, he said, is one reason for placing his designs on a public website as an "open source" that technology makers can utilize to test and tinker.

Jansen has posted schematics and designs of his first and second prototypes, the Mark 1 and Mark 2, for anyone to see and build. Jansen expects to have his latest version, the Mark 4, produced for "about $200."

"Everything you need to build one is on line" at www.tricorderproject.org, said Jansen. He hopes others will follow his lead.

While it may sound like the stuff of science fiction, Jansen isn't the only one to take notice of just how useful a real functioning tricorder would be - especially as a medical tool.

Telecommunications giant Qualcomm Inc this year launched the "Tricorder X-Prize Contest" with the slogan "Healthcare in the palm of your hand." Qualcomm hopes to motivate developers with a $10 million prize to make medical tricorders a reality.

Wanda Moebus of the Advanced Medical Technology Association, who is not affiliated with Jansen or Qualcomm, told Reuters the X-Prize "is really cool," but cautioned that making a real medical tricorder device "would have to be measured on its safety and effect, like all other medical technologies."

Jansen said he has been approached by "a couple of teams" about the X Prize, but added that his prototypes are more for science research than medical tools.

Besides, he said he already is on to his next frontier, making a sort of "replicator," another "Star Trek" device that will create 3D objects and foods that are dimensional copies of real items.

Jansen's "replicator" is a 3D printer, which in itself is not really new, but the scientist thinks about it in terms reminiscent of "Star Trek's" famous prologue. It's "like nothing we've ever seen before," Jansen said.

(The story was refiled to fix website address and paragraph)

(Reporting By Frank Simons; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)

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10:17 AM on 04/20/2012
There is a tricoder app for smart phones.....kinda cool
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mario andretti
I can't drive 55.
05:54 PM on 04/19/2012
Being able to do all these functions while standing might also help rid the world of the repairman buttcrack syndrome also.
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ProudToBeVeryLiberal
Science is the antidote to the poison of religion
12:03 PM on 04/19/2012
Add a "sensor suite" to a smartphone in the form of an extension plugged into the charger port/USB and throw in some software: voilà, you have have a "tricorder."
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Ossit
Ossit
09:09 AM on 04/19/2012
Give me a holodeck like on Star Trek's Next Generation. Teach me to program in my woman warrior story character and I'd have a ball. Nice phantasy.
04:27 PM on 04/18/2012
Tricorders are one of the many pieces of technology in star trek that were never used to their full extent. Devices such as these would be ideal for medical readings, yes, but for a squad commander, a tricorder would be worth anything.
cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
06:09 AM on 04/17/2012
A tricorder is just a sensor-transmitter array that senses things that our six senses can't. Perhaps it could bombard an object from a distance with particle, and laser beams to producing an imposed or reflected electromagnetic spectrum that identifies the materials out of which this object is made. Every material has a unique signature. It would have AI technology, and an immense signature memory in storage. It would be helpful for analyzing forensic signatures on site to solve crimes.
04:10 AM on 04/17/2012
I'll wait to celebrate when transporters and duplicators come into view (arms raised) Woo! Hoo!!
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J Rupel
"Let the lamp affix its beam..."
03:03 AM on 04/17/2012
So it's a thermometer?

Woooo...
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anitafeeney
no matter where you go there you are
02:50 AM on 04/17/2012
well how many people walk around now with a cell phone that lookes like a communicator from the old show how many people use or have used floppy disks that look like the computer disks they used on star trek and even my computer has some basic voice recognition software i can talk to it and tell it what to do ( that though still has a long way to go before its as good as on star trek )
01:43 AM on 04/17/2012
Science has convinced me that in at least 1000 years, humanity may have a reality and society very similar to Star Trek, Halo, or Mass Effect. I wish we could see it.... I'm only an optimist though.
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anitafeeney
no matter where you go there you are
02:52 AM on 04/17/2012
well i hope its like star trek but i am not counting on it i too wish we could see it but i dont think it will happen in our life times
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Jada Stone
09:07 AM on 04/17/2012
You think your lifetime will be 1000 years?
cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
06:24 AM on 04/17/2012
Death is a time machine, and incarnation is a landing craft. Perhaps you lived in ancient Rome before incarnating into this time and place after MT Vesuvius exploded. After we die, we become a natural propensity to be someone else at some other time. Propensity is a powerful idea! If I'm wrong, you'll never know for you must be to know.
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wesdfs
a guy with different point of veiw
01:22 AM on 04/17/2012
I would love to go to another earth and live like the star trek society with no polotics
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almasearch
my micro-bio is none of anyone's macro business
11:31 PM on 04/16/2012
Why should this be so surprising? Anyone remember Dick Tracy's watch that he could talk through? What I think would be really cool to see developed and marketed is a holographic image message (as seen in Star Wars) system. It's a matter of time, but I'd wager it'll be out there soon enough.
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anitafeeney
no matter where you go there you are
02:53 AM on 04/17/2012
or how about a holodeck like in star trek the next generation
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MarvinGardens
"Vacantly occupied"
10:53 PM on 04/16/2012
5th grade, stupid kids joke warning!
"I wonder if the Medical version of this tri-corder would be able to tell if there were Klingons on Uranus."
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anitafeeney
no matter where you go there you are
02:54 AM on 04/17/2012
fanned and faved just because i love the snark lol
09:59 PM on 04/16/2012
Some day we won't deny people food, shelter and medical care because they didn't 'earn' it. We will understand at last that all humans have these needs as a RIGHT.
10:25 PM on 04/16/2012
Sounds Great! Who is paying for this utopia....
03:12 AM on 04/17/2012
Money won't be necessary, the Humans in the future of Star Trek don't do things simply for the monetary gains.
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nomadrdw
Zen Druid
05:43 PM on 04/19/2012
there is more than enough wealth to do exactly that right this moment, but the vast majority is horded by a very small group of people and used only to acquire more and more wealth. even now, with the accomplishments payed for by the working class has brought the world so far that peoples from the 1800's would think it was magic.
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almasearch
my micro-bio is none of anyone's macro business
11:34 PM on 04/16/2012
Yeah!! Let's decriminalize drugs and criminalize work!!! (Not!)
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bcoburnree
09:49 PM on 04/16/2012
There's a story that a lawyer flew out from a Chicago firm to ask Roddenberry where he got the idea for the diagnostic beds in sick bay: you know, the ones that read vital signs and such with out anything touching the patient. Roddenberry told the man that he thought it up .. you know, imagination. The lawyer wasn't buying it, because the firm he represented was working on a similar device, and was trying to get patents for it.