Slashdot Mirror


Stanford Creates Tricorder-Like Devices For Detecting Cancer and Explosives (stanford.edu)

An anonymous reader writes: A new technology has promise to safely find buried plastic explosives and maybe even spot fast-growing tumors. The technique involves the clever interplay of microwaves and ultrasound to develop a detector like the Star Trek tricorder. The careful manipulation of two scientific principles drives both the military and medical applications of the Stanford work. First, all materials expand and contract when stimulated with electromagnetic energy, such as light or microwaves. Second, this expansion and contraction produces ultrasound waves that travel to the surface and can be detected remotely.

In a potential battlefield application, the microwaves would heat the suspect area, causing the muddy ground to expand and thus squeeze the plastic (abstract). Pulsing the microwaves would generate a series of ultrasound pressure waves that could be detected and interpreted to disclose the presence of buried plastic explosives. Solving the technical challenges of detecting ultrasound after it left the ground gave the Stanford researchers the experience to take aim at their ultimate goal – using the device in medical applications without touching the skin.

1 of 34 comments (clear)

  1. Tricorder-like by penguinoid · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I believe the tricorder's main attributes were:
    1) it can scan, analyze, or detect anything
    2) it doesn't exist

    I wonder which of these attributes they implemented?

    "We've been working on this for a little over two years," Khuri-Yakub said. "We're still at an early stage but we're confident that in five to ten to fifteen years, this will become practical and widely available."

    --
    Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways