Ten Inventions Inspired by Science Fiction

The innovators behind objects like the cellphone or the helicopter took inspiration from works like "Star Trek" and War of the Worlds

  • By Mark Strauss
  • Smithsonian.com, March 16, 2012
| 8 of 11 |

John Cover, President of Taser Systems, Inc.
Taser

John Cover, President of Taser Systems, Inc. and the inventor of the Taser gun holds one of the non-lethal instruments, the same as one used in a Miami, Fla. holdup there 9/22. (© Bettmann / Corbis)


Taser

One of the most famous literary characters of the early 20th century was Tom Swift, a genius inventor who was the protagonist in a series of juvenile science fiction books. NASA physicist Jack Cover, who invented the Taser, was a fan—“Taser” is an acronym for one of Swift’s fictional inventions, the “Thomas A. Swift’s Electric Rifle.”

| 8 of 11 |





 

Add New Comment


Name: (required)

Email: (required)

Comment:

Comments are moderated, and will not appear until Smithsonian.com has approved them. Smithsonian reserves the right not to post any comments that are unlawful, threatening, offensive, defamatory, invasive of a person's privacy, inappropriate, confidential or proprietary, political messages, product endorsements, or other content that might otherwise violate any laws or policies.

Comments (40)

+ View All Comments

Second life came after many many similar projects!

Rather surprised you didn't include the communication satellite, invented "fictionally" by author Arthur C. Clarke. Without that, several of the inventions mentioned here would never have reached their full potential or even been possible.

Robert Heinlein also first described the Water Bed in Stranger in a Strange Land

DaVinci penned a sort of helicopter... and I do believe he lived one or two years before Verne.

Seriously, no Arthur C Clarke? I would have thought that satellites would have rated a mention before "robot arms"

The first submarine used in warfare was the Turtle, used in the Revolutionary War: http://www.history.navy.mil/library/online/sub_turtle.htm It predates the Fulton, Verne, and Peral designs by nearly a century.

Why is the star trek photo the only one that doesn't match the caption? That is obviously not the ST:TNG nor is Kirk listening to music in that scene. He's playing back a video clip. Maybe I'm the only nerd who cares but this article is by the Smithsonian people about science right?

Everything starts with imagining the impossible to create something wonderful. The literature is not fought with science :)

Please check this link: http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juan_de_la_Cierva Juan de la Cierva had already developed and tested his own helicopter in 1923, later on his patent was used by the US to produce the Pitcairn PCA-2. Kind Regards.

Excuse me for my comment, but I just want to point out a forgotten fact. Isaac Peral had already launched a much bigger and successful submarine ten years before, in 1888. Please check this link: http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isaac_Peral Thank you for your attention and kind regards.

Why wasn't the satellite mentioned in this article. Satellites were first described by Arthur C. Clarke many years before we actually had them.

11th Invention inspired by Sci fi SCIENTOLOGY

Robert Fulton, working for Napoleon Buonaparte in 1800 developed a submarine that in sea trials in Brest stayed ubmerged at 2 meters for 2 hours. Subseqently the french didn't see the benefit and refused further interest in the project. He , Fulton did go on to build the first comercially viable staem ship to cross the Atlantic in 1807.

I think you meant "John W. Campbell" in segment 5.



Advertisement



Follow Us

Advertisement