Three years of improving the technology used in the Optical Trap Displays has now allowed the BYU researchers to take the effect to the next step with animations that play out in front of an observer’s eyes in real-time. The team demonstrated the amazing effect with tiny recreations of Star Trek spaceships engaged in a mid-air photon torpedo battle (complete with simulated explosions that look like vector animations straight out of Tron) and even miniature versions of Obi-Wan and Darth Vader dueling with glowing lightsabers made from actual lasers.

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The researchers have even come up with ways to track the movements of a real-life object and make the free-floating holograms appear to interact with its movements, like an animated stick figure character walking across a human finger. Using optical tricks like playing with perspective and parallax motions, the holograms could even be made to appear much larger than they really are when projected in front of a pair of eyes, so there are some potentially interesting applications when it comes to making viable smart glasses.

In their current form the holograms being generated by the Optical Trap Displays are very tiny, requiring cameras with macro lenses and even microscopes to see the effect in detail because, in order for a beam of light to manipulate a tiny floating particle, it has to be very tiny. But as the technology improves, several moving particles could be combined to increase the size of the effect. Does this mean Star Trek’s holodecks are right around the corner? Not quite, but the technology demonstrates that despite being science fiction, it’s not a completely outlandish and impossible idea.