• This is a political forum that is non-biased/non-partisan and treats every person's position on topics equally. This debate forum is not aligned to any political party. In today's politics, many ideas are split between and even within all the political parties. Often we find ourselves agreeing on one platform but some topics break our mold. We are here to discuss them in a civil political debate. If this is your first visit to our political forums, be sure to check out the RULES. Registering for debate politics is necessary before posting. Register today to participate - it's free!

Now We Have a (Tiny) Tractor Beam

Rogue Valley

Lead or get out of the way
DP Veteran
Joined
Apr 18, 2013
Messages
94,039
Reaction score
82,282
Location
Barsoom
Gender
Male
Political Leaning
Independent
Now We Have a (Tiny) Tractor Beam

defense-large.jpg


Researchers in England have created, essentially, a tractor beam that uses highly targeted sound waves to move objects in the air as though pulled and pushed by invisible fingers. The ability to manipulate objects with sound was demonstrated back in 2001, when E. H. Brandt used sound waves to lift heavy balls of tungsten. But he used multiple arrays of sophisticated speakers that essentially enclosed the object in a box. Today’s researchers were able “to rotate and manipulate particles using even a single-sided emitter,” according to the their paper published Monday in the journal Nature.

Their breakthrough utilizes a formula built around the Gor’Kov potential, named for Russian-American physicist Lev Petrovich Gor’kov, a means of measuring the force of sound on an object in an arbitrary sound field. Researchers from the University of Bristol and Sussex in the United Kingdom, working with a company called Ultrahaptics, were able to levitate, rotate, and move expanded-polystyrene particles up to 3.1mm in diameter. They used special speakers called acoustic transducers that were 10mm in diameter to produce sounds at 40 kHz frequency.

The breakthrough holds potential for non-lethal weapons of the sort that the military is looking to use to stop attackers at checkpoints. Beyond that, you could potentially move objects to build bases in places where you don’t want put boots on the ground. Someday, the principle might help to capture aircraft in flight or even objects in other hard-to-reach areas. Of course, any tractor beam is less fun on the receiving end.

40 kHz frequency. A normal human being hears at 20-20,000 Hz.
 
It's amazing, but useless without an atmosphere. Sound won't travel in a vacuum.
 
What happens if one reaches their hands inside the sound-wave area? If it can move heavy balls then what is the possibility of accidents?
 
It's amazing, but useless without an atmosphere. Sound won't travel in a vacuum.

This seemed to me to be like some kind of a heavy load mover, applicable here on earth. In vacuum and space things are lighter anyway.
 
This seemed to me to be like some kind of a heavy load mover, applicable here on earth. In vacuum and space things are lighter anyway.

The mass is the same, but the gravity acting on that mass is very much less (distance from an object with gravity is greater).

If you accelerated an object with a certain amount of mass you'd still expend the energy required to do so, and a proportional amount of energy in the opposite direction to decelerate it as well. So, no, 'In vacuum and space things are lighter' is not quite accurate. :mrgreen:
 
It's amazing, but useless without an atmosphere. Sound won't travel in a vacuum.

Excellent observation !

" In space, no one can hear you scream "
 
Back
Top Bottom