Watching 3-D movies generally means suffering through two things:
crappy plotlines that favor spectacle over substance and the need to
wear some annoying, dorky glasses. Scientists may have solved one of
these frustrations. (You might be able to guess which.). Read on to find out.
Researchers in South Korea have created a new method that would allow
moviegoers to simply sit down and start watching a 3-D movie with no
extra gear necessary. The research was published today in Optics Express.
“This is essentially the next step that was required for 3-D display technology without glasses,” said physicist John Koshel, who studies optical science at the University of Arizona and was not associated with the new work.
We see the world in three dimensions because our eyes are spaced
slightly apart, each looking out at a different angle. Your brain
combines the information from both eyes, determining where each object
in your field of view is to generate depth perception.
To achieve 3-D movies or television, the trick is to send a slightly
different, offset picture to each eye. Special glasses handle this task
for most modern 3-D blockbuster movies, with each lens only letting in
one polarization of light. Polarization describes the direction in which
the electromagnetic waves in light oscillate, either up-down,
left-right, or something in between.
When you sit down to watch something like Avatar, two
projectors are displaying two images on the same screen, with the light
from one polarized left-right and the other up-down. This is why the
screen looks kind of blurry when you take the glasses off – there are
two movies playing on it at the same time. The 3-D glasses correct the
situation by separating these images, allowing the left-projector movie
to go to your left eye and the right-projector movie into your right.
But needing two projectors perfectly synced in a theater is awkward
and expensive. There are some glasses-free methods around, where a
special filter covering the screen sends some of the light to your right
eye and some to your left, creating a 3-D image. This is the technology
in Nintendo’s 3DS gaming system and several smart phone displays, such
as the HTC Evo 3D. In a movie theater, this glasses-free 3-D technique
would require the projector to sit behind the screen, but most theaters
are not designed for this.
The new method would allow movie theaters to keep their projectors
where they’ve always been, behind the audience, and uses fairly simple
optical technology. A special array sits in front of the projector and
polarizes its light. A filter covering the screen then obscures
different vertical regions of the screen, like the slats of venetian
blinds. Each of your eyes, sitting at a slightly different angle, has
some of the screen blocked and some of the screen visible. The movie has
the right-eye and left-eye images interleaved in vertical columns with
one another. The trick then is to have the light visible to your left
eye contain the left-eye pixels and vice versa for the right eye.
The new method is less cumbersome than both the current two-projector
and the behind-the-screen-projector methods. But because it blocks some
of the light to your different eyes, the current image resolution is
fairly low. Koshel expects that 3-D movie companies will be interested
in upgrading the method’s abilities and resolution to bring glasses-free
3-D to the masses.
“This technology is still in its infancy, but it’s a new step that was hidden for a long time,” Koshel said.
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