How Real Is the Science in Star Wars?

It’s said that great science fiction has a basis in good science, but it is also true that good science can be inspired by great science fiction

Written byUniversity of Cambridge
| 3 min read
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The anticipation is over: The Force Awakens is with us. To a self-confessed geek like Karen Yu from the Institute for Manufacturing at the University of Cambridge, this is like all of her Christmases coming at once. It also raises some very important questions: what is the Force, how do you make a lightsaber–and does the new film finally put to rest the ghost of The Phantom Menace?

Warning: contains mild spoilers.

In any science or engineering lab, in any part of the world, there is one subject that is certain to have come up at some point over tea, coffee, or lunch: how do you build a lightsaber? It’s true: ask any of your friends in those fields and they will talk endlessly about how they think it can be built. (I personally subscribe to a plasma containment philosophy, while a friend thinks he has come up with a waveguided laser design–a true ‘light’ saber if you will). We are all, at our hearts, geeks and Star Wars fans.

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