Coming soon...the 'Star Wars' phone that lets you talk to holograms of your loved ones

Leia Display Systems to have working model operating next year

Caller sits in front of camera with two lenses and a microphone

Images blend to form a 3D version and steamed via internet

Set to be on the market within five years, Polish company claims

When Princess Leia appeared before Luke Skywalker as a hologram in the 1977 blockbuster Star Wars, it was very much a work of science fiction.

But fast-forward four decades and the hologram telephone call – which will allow callers to see a live 3D image of the other person on the line – is set to become reality.

The technology is being pioneered by Leia Display Systems, a Polish company named after the Star Wars heroine.



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Using a camera with two lenses and a tablets, your image is blended into one and beamed onto a screen

Leia Display Systems, a Polish company named after the Star Wars character, aims to have a model by next year

It aims to have a working model of the telephone operating by next year after it successfully built interactive 3D hologram machines.

To make a 3D phone call, a person will sit in front of a specially adapted camera featuring two lenses and a microphone. The two images the lenses create are blended to form a 3D version and streamed via the internet to the person who is being called.

A hologram machine will receive the image and beam it using a laser projector on to a ‘screen’ of water vapour, which gives the image its third dimension.

The hologram image will speak, move and listen in real time. The company also believes its invention will be on the market within five years.



‘Our holograms will take video- phone calls to the next level,’ said Marcin Panek, chief executive of Leia Display Systems.

The firm claims people will be able to use the devise - not unlike a tablet - in their own homes in five years

‘We are on the frontier of technology that was imagined in movies 40 years ago – it is science fiction becoming science fact.

‘It will be as if loved ones, friends and family are standing right in front of you while you talk with them halfway across the world.

‘At the moment our holograms are made using machines that are more than 6ft high but we are designing smaller versions that can be set up on a coffee table in a living room.

‘It’s incredible. Ten years ago people would have been astounded at the idea of tablet devices but now they are everywhere.



'It will be the same with holograms. It is still early days but we hope to sell hologram telephone devices within the next five years.’

Star Wars was famed for scenes like this where Ki Adi Mundi appears virtually for a Jedi meeting

Mr Panek said the possibilities for the technology range from relatives virtually attending family occasions to specialist surgeons overseeing hospital operations while located on the other side of the world.

He said the company was inspired after noticing the 3D effect created when a nightclub laser is beamed on to dry ice.



He added that the first systems will cost thousands of pounds but, as with any technology breakthrough, the price will come down once they become more commonplace.

Mr Panek also claimed that within ten years we will see the creation of a Star Trek-style fully holographic room, in which 3D objects can be viewed and manipulated from every angle.

He added: ‘It is not impossible, and with the technology moving so fast, it is only a matter of time.