Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

Indian-Origin Researcher Shree K Nayar Helps Create Novel Flexible Camera

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Apr, 2016 11:54 AM
    A team led by an Indian-origin professor at Columbia University has created a novel sheet camera that can be wrapped around everyday objects to capture images that cannot be taken with one or more conventional cameras.
     
    "Cameras today capture the world from essentially a single point in space. While the camera industry has made remarkable progress in shrinking the camera to a tiny device with ever increasing imaging quality, we are exploring a radically different approach to imaging," said Shree K Nayar, computer science professor at Columbia University. 
     
    "We believe there are numerous applications for cameras that are large in format but very thin and highly flexible," added Nayar who graduated from the Birla Institute of Technology, Ranchi, in 1984.
     
    Nayar's team designed and fabricated a flexible lens array that adapts its optical properties when the sheet camera is bent. 
     
    This optical adaptation enables the device to produce high quality images over a wide range of sheet deformations.
     
    If such an imaging system could be manufactured cheaply -- like a roll of plastic or fabric -- it could be wrapped around all kinds of things, from street poles to furniture, cars, and even people's clothing, to capture wide, seamless images with unusual fields of view. 
     
    "The adaptive lens array we have developed is an important step towards making the concept of flexible sheet cameras viable," Nayar noted. 
     
    "The next step will be to develop large-format detector arrays to go with the deformable lens array. The amalgamation of the two technologies will lay the foundation for a new class of cameras that expand the range of applications that benefit from imaging," he said.
     
    The novel technology is set to be presented at the international conference on computational photography (ICCP) at Northwestern University, in Illinois from May 13 to 15.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Apple rejects app to facilitate female masturbation

    Apple rejects app to facilitate female masturbation
     An app that teaches women how to masturbate has been removed by Apple from its iTunes stores worldwide.

    Apple rejects app to facilitate female masturbation

    Bizarre! One in six Britons prefer sex with robots

    Bizarre! One in six Britons prefer sex with robots
    Roughly one in six respondents would “have sex with an android” and another one in three (29 percent) were 'OK' with others getting down with robots, the survey revealed.

    Bizarre! One in six Britons prefer sex with robots

    Want to know how to get a good raise? Read this!

    Want to know how to get a good raise? Read this!
    Have you received a less favourable appraisal from your boss this year? You are likely coming to office late. A study has found bosses to be favouring employees who, even though on flexible timings, arrived early.

    Want to know how to get a good raise? Read this!

    New technology may improve light-based cancer treatment

    New technology may improve light-based cancer treatment
    Researchers have developed a new technology that could bring photodynamic therapy (PDT), which uses lasers to activate special drugs to treat easily accessible tumours such as oral and skin cancer, into areas of the body which were previously inaccessible.

    New technology may improve light-based cancer treatment

    Handle this! Teenagers don't trust information via tweets

    Handle this! Teenagers don't trust information via tweets
    Are you among those who love tweeting but somewhat wary of information via tweets from others? Join the 'Millennial Generation' that has a “healthy mistrust” of the information they read on Twitter.

    Handle this! Teenagers don't trust information via tweets

    Secure your tablet with safer lithium-ion battery

    Secure your tablet with safer lithium-ion battery
    The convenient and deficient lithium-ion battery (LIB) that power your tablets and smartphones may soon become a lot safer as scientists have designed a kind of lithium battery component that is far less likely to catch fire and still promises effective performance.

    Secure your tablet with safer lithium-ion battery