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Sonic Tractor Beams

How sound waves can lift objects, How to ensure cities stay mobile, Digital Matatus app helps commuters in Nairobi, The photographer exploring our obsession with digital gadgets

A team of researchers in the UK have built the world鈥檚 first sonic tractor beam that can lift and move objects using sound waves. The researchers used high-amplitude sound waves to generate an acoustic hologram which can pick up and move small objects. It might yield interesting applications such as a sonic production line to transport delicate objects and assemble them, all without physical contact. Click talks one of the team, professor Bruce Drinkwater.

Cities on the Move
How will the design of cities and public transportation change when networked multi-modal systems are the norm? How will the streetscapes and mobility patterns change? Gareth Mitchell talks to Greg Lindsay at the Cities on the Move conference.

Digital Matatus - Part Two
Michael Kaloki reports from the streets of Nairobi on board a matatu bus trying out the Digital Matatus app. The app now benefits from a collaboration with Google Maps and aims to help commuters navigate the hundreds of matatu minibus routes.

Removed
Click interviews the photographer Eric Pickersgill who has a fascinating series of photos of people using the tech gadgets for example mobile phones and tablets. Pickersgill has staged a number of portraits of people interacting with their gadgets, but the gadgets have been removed. Pickersgill joins Click to discuss our obsession with gadgets as explored in his series, Removed.

(Photo: Holograms are three-dimensional light-fields that can be projected from a two-dimensional surface. Researchers have created acoustic holograms with shapes such as tweezers, twisters and cages that exert forces on particles to levitate and manipulate them. Image courtesy of Asier Marzo, Bruce Drinkwater and Sriram Subramanian 漏 2015)

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27 minutes

Last on

Wed 28 Oct 2015 14:32GMT

Broadcasts

  • Tue 27 Oct 2015 20:32GMT
  • Tue 27 Oct 2015 21:32GMT
  • Wed 28 Oct 2015 02:32GMT
  • Wed 28 Oct 2015 03:32GMT
  • Wed 28 Oct 2015 04:32GMT
  • Wed 28 Oct 2015 05:32GMT
  • Wed 28 Oct 2015 07:32GMT
  • Wed 28 Oct 2015 13:32GMT
  • Wed 28 Oct 2015 14:32GMT

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