Mitsubishi Developing Tech That Puts “Display” In Mid-Air ( … Or Something)

February 17, 2016 by Dave Haynes

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Mitsubishi Electric Corporation has announced development of an “aerial display” that is touted as being able to project images measuring approximately 56 inches diagonally into midair.
The Japanese company suggests the technology would be commercially available by 2020, and be relevant to use cases like digital signage and entertainment.

The company, in an announcement today, says the two key components for the new technology are a beam splitter – an optical device that divides incoming light into reflected light and transmitted light – and a retro-reflective sheet – an optical device that reflects incoming light back in the incident direction. A beam splitter and retro-reflective sheet are arranged in a set with a screen. The light that is projected from the screen is reflected by the beam splitter and then subsequently by the retro-reflective sheet. The result is that the light re-converges as an image that appears to be floating in the air.
I only sorta kinda maybe understand all that, but it sounds and looks a bit like a take on the whole Pepper’s Ghost thing that brought rapper Tupac back from the grave at Coachella a few years ago, and has been used for a century as a cool illusion and trick. It layers in a couple of complimentary, more traditional projections, to help guide the eye.
I could be wrong on that, but the visuals that Mitsubishi provided in its press release are comically small and pathetic. Get what you can out of these images (actual size provided).
The release continues:
To realize this technology, Mitsubishi Electric developed an optical simulation program to calculate the optimal arrangement of the screen, beam splitter and retro-reflective sheet to achieve an aerial display measuring approximately 56 inches diagonally (886mm wide, 1,120mm high) projected at least one meter from the beam splitter.

One problem was that people who are not accustomed to focusing their eyes on open space find it difficult to understand where an aerial image is being displayed without physical cues. To address this, Mitsubishi Electric developed a system that uses a projector to display guide images on the walls on both sides of the aerial image to indicate the position. This system divides an input into left and right guide images and the aerial image, but links the three seamlessly for high entertainment value. Factoring in the size of the guide images, the total display area measures approximately 90 inches diagonally (1,992mm wide and 1,120mm high).

Mitsubishi Electric is researching and developing the display technologies that society will demand in the near future. This technology is expected to have many potential applications requiring highly realistic visual expression, for example displaying large images in the air above a stadium or displaying life-sized images of people for remote communication. In April 2015, Mitsubishi Electric began joint research on aerial displays with Hirotsugu Yamamoto, an Associate Professor at the Graduate School of Engineering at Utsunomiya University, which has led to this development.
A video would help, Mitsubishi guys, nudge-nudge, as would images larger than soda crackers.
Sheesh.

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