DTI Inducted into NASA Hall of Fame
Dimension Technologies Inc. (DTI) submitted and won Phase I and II Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) awards from NASA Ames Research Center to develop a 3-D display. DTI was successful in creating a special illumination pattern for the left and right eye. Because each eye sees the scene from a slightly different angle, the angular displacement (binocularity) between the right and left eye creates a true 3-D image.
NASA is always seeking ways to enhance its understanding of great masses of data, such as fluid flow around air- and space-craft surfaces. Visual 3-D representations are particularly useful to analyze such data. However, a disadvantage of most 3-D systems is that they require the user to wear special glasses. NASA sought the development of a 3-D display that could eliminate that requirement.
Four DTI personnel were inducted into the NASA Hall of Fame: Inventor Jesse Eichenlaub, Researcher Mark Katafiaz, Senior Engineer Kwang Soo Park and President Arnold Lagergren.
DTI holds patents for 3-D imaging and produces a display that can instantly switch from 2-D to 3-D operation. DTI’s 3-D Virtual Window displays are being used for computer games, protein analysis, surgical imaging, and numerous other applications in data visualization, medicine, architecture, business, real estate, entertainment, research, design, military, and consumer applications.