Categories: Uncategorized

Star Trek aTricordera’ Scanners Possible, Set Medical Community To Stunned.

The fictional technology in Star Trek has been rightfully used as the benchmark to which all to which modern-day technological advances should aspire. Automatic garage door openers are an impressive accomplishment, but in a science-fiction world of warp speed drivers and instantaneous teleportation, they are really nothing to brag about. The technology of our time may not allow for sci-fi applications like phasers (tasers don’t count!), but the increasing amount of technology squeezed into a handheld gadget is fast approaching near-Trekkian levels.

Tricorder from StarTrek TV Set credit: DailyMail

One example of this is seen in the recent advances in Terahertz wave (or T-ray) imaging, which is currently used in an increasing number of airport scanners. Because a T-ray has less photon energy than an X-ray, they pose a smaller risk to tissue and cell structure and are thus more attractive as an imaging option. Traditionally, T-rays required an immense amount of energy to create in controlled temperature environments, but researchers at the Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) in Singapore, and Imperial College London have published a groundbreaking advancement which miniaturizes the size of a T-ray generator through use of a nano-antennae: a semi-conductor wafer and a pair of metal strips separated by 100-nanometer gap. This design breakthrough is perhaps the first step to creating a fully functioning a Tricorder-like medical scanner allowing doctors to to scan a patient for tumors, internal bleeding, many other sorts of medical maladies. Although still in its early stages, the research from A*STAR and the ICL comes on the heels of the $10 million Tricorder X-Prize, announced at CES in Las Vegas, which will be given to the team that designs a practical, workable Tricorder scanner. In order to win, a prototype must weigh less than five pounds and be able to detect a set of at least 15 diseases, so A*STAR and ICL might have a bit of work ahead of them. Whether the T-ray nano-antennae will win the X-Prize winning design remains to be seen but no matter what the outcome of the contest is, the real winners are those of us who are waiting on our phasers.
Techli

Edward is the founder and CEO of Techli.com. He is a writer, U.S. Army veteran, serial entrepreneur and chronic early adopter. Having worked for startups in Silicon Valley and Chicago, he founded, grew and successfully exited his own previous startup and loves telling the stories of innovators. Email: Edward.Domain@techli.com | @EdwardDomain

Share
Published by
Techli

Recent Posts

NovaWave Capital brings new LPs on board and launches AI venture studio

NovaWave Capital, the Silicon Valley-based VC fund, announced this week that it's expanding its AI…

6 días ago

Automotus picks up $9M to bring AI order to congested curbs

Automotus, a Los Angeles startup focused on using software to untangle curbside congestion, has raised…

2 semanas ago

7 Tech Innovations to Watch in 2026

As we move deeper into the digital age, 2026 is shaping up to be a…

2 semanas ago

AI is professionalizing how enterprises communicate

For startups, mastering communication is no longer just about persuasion—it’s about scalability. As companies grow,…

4 semanas ago

India’s rise in a fragmented world sets the stage for the Horasis India Meeting in Singapore

In an increasingly fragmented world economy, global alignment has become both an opportunity and a…

1 mes ago

On route to Las Vegas: AI-supported resilience coach from Deep Care named Digital Health honoree at CES Innovation Awards 2026

The world-renowned CES Innovation Awards® program is an annual competition honoring outstanding design and engineering…

1 mes ago