Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Fastest camera in the world


From wired magazine. Scientists have made the fastest camera ever. It can take 6.1 million pictures in a single second, at a shutter speed of 440 trillionths of a second. Light itself moves just a fraction of a centimeter in that time. The camera works by illuminating objects with a laser that emits a different infrared frequency for every single pixel, allowing them to custom-amplify a signal that would otherwise be too dim to see.

High shutter speeds enable moving objects to be clearly photographed. The less time a camera’s optical eye is open, the less time a subject has to move. But this comes at a price: less light enters the camera, causing the image to be underexposed. That’s why sports photographers use high-powered strobe lights.

The technology is dubbed STEAM (Serial Time-Encoded Amplified Microscopy) and it illuminates objects with an infrared laser that cycles through a series of different wavelengths, one for each pixel on the sensor. This technology is developed by Keisuke Goda’s team and led by Bahram Jalali of UCLA.

When reflected light hits the camera’s sensor, each pixel picks up its dedicated wavelength, and is given an electronic boost of a matching wavelength. That amplifies the original dim signal, composed of just a few photons, until it becomes visible. This can’t be done in a conventional digital camera, because the sensor doesn’t know what the original wavelengths were.

For now, STEAM can only produce images composed of just 3,000 pixels, a far cry from the multi-million-pixel cameras used by consumers. But Goda and his team intends to develop a multi-megapixel camera that can take 100 million pictures per second, with a frame rate of they’re hoping to up this to mega-multipixel mode competitive with standard digital cameras, taking 100 million pictures per second, with a shutter speed of just one-trillionth of a second.

Via

2 komentar:

Zippy said...

Opo to iki..??
Gak tw ni sob, wkwkkwk....
Cuma tau, intinya tentang kamera, wkwwkkw...

votre angle said...

So that how the light of camera work, hmmm...i think UCLA only the hospital but there a lab too. when will our university lab make the same thing too? wish soon!!

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