Tricorder Project Releases Prototype Open Source 3D Printable Spectrometer
upontheturtlesback writes "As part of developing the next open source science tricorder model, Dr. Peter Jansen of the Tricorder project has released the source to an inexpensive 3D printable visible spectrometer prototype intended for the next science tricorder, but also suitable for Arduino or other embedded electronics projects for science education. With access to a Makerbot-class 3D printer, the spectrometer can be build for about $20 in materials. The source files including hardware schematics, board layouts, Arduino/Processing sketches and example data are available on Thingiverse, and potential contributors are encouraged to help improve the spectrometer design."
A lawsuit from Paramount in 3 .. 2 .. 1 ..
It would be interesting to empress the engrams of the average trekkie upon a computer, the resulting torrent of illogic would be most entertaining.
A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
Not to be a stick in the mud...but how is this better than the more commonly available CMOS cameras on all our cell phones? It doesn't seem to have the resolution to identify spectral transition lines (and thereby identify chemical compounds). Could you combine it with a laser or two to identify specific compounds? Since air is transparent in 400nm-700nm, it can't tell you the atmosphere is breathable...unless you ionized it first and made it glow.
What would you use this for?
1^2=1; (-1)^2=1; 1^2=(-1)^2; 1=-1; 1=0.
This thread has a lot of nerdy topics: 3D printing, Star Trek references, arduino, electronics, open source, real-world science.
My question is: where the hell are the comments?
Too many readers are writhing in ecstasy. As soon as they recover they will be with us.
A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
Gene Roddenberry saw this coming, and made sure the name was usable without a trademark issue. http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/Tricorder "...due to a clause in Gene Roddenberry's contracts with Desilu/Paramount dating back to the time of The Original Series. The clause specified that if any company could find a way to make one of the fictional devices actually work, then they would have the right to use the name."
There've been open source spectrometers for smartphones and webcams on Thingiverse and PublicLab.org for a few years: http://thingiverse.com/thing:49934, http://thingiverse.com/thing:125428
http://publiclab.org/wiki/spectrometer
And a papercraft spectrometer for $10: http://publiclab.org/wiki/foldable-spec
The new project looks great -- I just hope the new project intends compatibility with the growing open/crowdsourced spectral library at http://spectralworkbench.org/ -- because the more data in there, the easier matching becomes.
Welcome to the open spectrometry movement!