seen that happen before, you go infront of a projector like thing with a background and your instantly like the backgroumd, my teacher did it once, she looked like the aol woman
This is not invisibility. People have been mislead with actual tests of a simple technique that involves a controlled environment. It requires the use of a proyector and a prepared background. It cracks me up so see how people even give details about the experiment. Yeah the experiment is true, but not as people have been seeing it on the web. People, go do some research and you'll see.
lol this isnt real the fact that now a days theres "special effects".
but anyways there was no real press release on this nor it got any props because it was never real to begin with. look at the world new and tell every one that its real...
theyre using a projector... behind the person theres a camera recording whats behind him and that is sent to the projector which porjects the images on him... and the clothes are made from a material that pactically dissapears then the images are bein reflected...
behind him theres no camera because theres a wall which doesnt move (idk bout the tv tho..)
It's a still image (taken from our viewpoint) that's being projected onto him - that's why he doesn't appear in the projected image. The TV screen's live footage continues to animate when he's in front of it because that same footage is composited in realtime into the still image being projected (notice how the footage is delayed and choppy when seen on his cloak as opposed to on the actual TV).
light enters the back of the garment, and the fiber-optic fibers bend it around to the front of the garment, so that you see what is behind him, as if you were looking through him, as if he were...INVISIBLE! haha
We're not quite at that level of technology yet. :) All this is is a video projection reflecting off a shiny cloak. The effect can only be seen from one viewpoint.
The Tokyo University team led by Professor Susumu Tachi. Before the voyeurs out there start celebrating too hard though, you don't get to see what's underneath. Well, not exactly.
The team has managed to create clothes that are covered in tiny pieces of glass which effectively become a screen. A video camera is then used to record the scenery behind the wearer and the results are projected onto the clothes. The effect is that the wearer appears 'transparent'.
He is standing in front of a blank wall, the wall backround AND tv is projected, therefore going on his clothes wherever he looks, giving the illusion of semi-invisibility.
The backdrop and TV are real, but the projected image is very low-intensity so that it isn't seen on his face and hands. It is seen on the cloak because the cloak's retro-reflective material reflects most of the light hitting it back in the direction it came from; the projector and camera are placed at nearly the same position, so almost all the light from the projector is reflected back to the camera (people standing at different viewpoints would not be able to see the projection on the cloak).
seen that happen before, you go infront of a projector like thing with a background and your instantly like the backgroumd, my teacher did it once, she looked like the aol woman
JamesTravers2 3 years ago
THERE IS TINY SCREENES ALL OVER THE THINGy AND SMALL CAMERAs makeing VIdeos And IT PLACES THE VIDEO ON TO THE SCREEN
xxxy0shixxx 3 years ago
This is not invisibility. People have been mislead with actual tests of a simple technique that involves a controlled environment. It requires the use of a proyector and a prepared background. It cracks me up so see how people even give details about the experiment. Yeah the experiment is true, but not as people have been seeing it on the web. People, go do some research and you'll see.
str8out 3 years ago 4
lol this isnt real the fact that now a days theres "special effects".
but anyways there was no real press release on this nor it got any props because it was never real to begin with. look at the world new and tell every one that its real...
D1G174L 4 years ago
yes it is real
heedmywarning22 4 years ago
it has been on the news. it wasn't this, though, it was the brits working on tanks.
Yetivision 4 years ago
no once i gain i stand by my word look when he puts his arms over his face it dont show his face but behind him.
but anyhoo theres something more interesting look for e-paper much more interesting.
D1G174L 4 years ago
it is real. its been on the news.
and well it depends on what you think real is.
the clothing doesnt actually make u invisible.
theyre using a projector... behind the person theres a camera recording whats behind him and that is sent to the projector which porjects the images on him... and the clothes are made from a material that pactically dissapears then the images are bein reflected...
behind him theres no camera because theres a wall which doesnt move (idk bout the tv tho..)
Dy36ix1 3 years ago 2
It's a still image (taken from our viewpoint) that's being projected onto him - that's why he doesn't appear in the projected image. The TV screen's live footage continues to animate when he's in front of it because that same footage is composited in realtime into the still image being projected (notice how the footage is delayed and choppy when seen on his cloak as opposed to on the actual TV).
TheBeatfox 3 years ago
yea i know how its done
when ppl do this outside they put a camera behind the person and a projector in front to it looks like u can see through him...
Dy36ix1 2 years ago
light enters the back of the garment, and the fiber-optic fibers bend it around to the front of the garment, so that you see what is behind him, as if you were looking through him, as if he were...INVISIBLE! haha
JRocYourFaceOff 4 years ago
We're not quite at that level of technology yet. :) All this is is a video projection reflecting off a shiny cloak. The effect can only be seen from one viewpoint.
TheBeatfox 3 years ago
still not real invisibility - WHEN!!!!
myvarsity 4 years ago
The Tokyo University team led by Professor Susumu Tachi. Before the voyeurs out there start celebrating too hard though, you don't get to see what's underneath. Well, not exactly.
The team has managed to create clothes that are covered in tiny pieces of glass which effectively become a screen. A video camera is then used to record the scenery behind the wearer and the results are projected onto the clothes. The effect is that the wearer appears 'transparent'.
damianlushis 4 years ago
He is standing in front of a blank wall, the wall backround AND tv is projected, therefore going on his clothes wherever he looks, giving the illusion of semi-invisibility.
bhasbun 4 years ago
If the background and tv are being projected then why don't they show up on his face and hands?
matticusprime 4 years ago
The backdrop and TV are real, but the projected image is very low-intensity so that it isn't seen on his face and hands. It is seen on the cloak because the cloak's retro-reflective material reflects most of the light hitting it back in the direction it came from; the projector and camera are placed at nearly the same position, so almost all the light from the projector is reflected back to the camera (people standing at different viewpoints would not be able to see the projection on the cloak).
TheBeatfox 3 years ago
this is BS, that is impsbl.
edisonmexico 4 years ago
It is completely real, and possible.
Infinity2008 4 years ago
is this real?
patotubes 4 years ago
I heard about that. 'Sposed to be pretty cool.
89jessica2 5 years ago