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A Real Life Tractor Beam Uses Sound – But Will it Work in Space?

Scientists have invented a tractor beam, able to move and manipulate small objects using sound waves.

Tractor beams are a sci-fi staple. It’s as though you can’t buy a spaceship in the future without it coming pre-equipped with a built-in tractor beam, for bringing in pesky rebel vessels or dangerous alien objects. It is, perhaps, an over-used plot device – and yet it’s one that today’s scientists haven’t been able to replicate, until now.

Researchers from the Universities of Bristol and Sussex, along with collaborators Ultrahaptics, have built an honest-to-goodness tractor beam, using sonic waves to lift, pull, and manipulate objects in the air.

Published in Nature Communications, the scientists involved in the project foresee a number of different uses for the sci-fi tech. One could use these beams to move and assemble fine, delicate objects on an assembly line; you could transport drug capsules, or microsurgical equipment through blood vessels.

Anyone who has stood next to a loudspeaker at a concert, or placed sand on one, can tell you that sound waves are easily capable of moving physical objects. Bruce Drinkwater, Professor of Ultrasonics in the University of Bristol’s Department of Mechanical Engineering, explains what makes this technology so much more impressive: “We all know that sound waves can have a physical effect. But here we have managed to control the sound to a degree never previously achieved.”

Indeed, you can got our monkey borg – tractor beams are surely next on somebody’s list.

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