Monday, December 15, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

World's fastest camera is here

Darpan News Desk IANS, 04 Dec, 2014 11:17 AM
    A team of biomedical engineers has developed the world's fastest camera, a device that can capture events up to 100 billion frames per second.
     
    The current ultrafast imaging techniques are limited by on-chip storage and electronic readout speed to operations of about 10 million frames per second.
     
    "For the first time, humans can see light pulses on the fly," said Lihong Wang, professor of Biomedical Engineering at Washington University in St. Louis.
     
    "Because this technique advances the imaging frame rate by orders of magnitude, we now enter a new regime to open up new visions,” said Wang.
     
    The team used a technique called compressed ultrafast photography (CUP) to make movies of the images they took with single laser shots.
     
    This is a series of devices customised to work with high-powered microscopes and telescopes to capture dynamic natural and physical phenomena.
     
    Once the raw data are acquired, the actual images are formed on a personal computer.
     
    "These ultrafast cameras have the potential to greatly enhance our understanding of very fast biological interactions and chemical processes and allow us to build better models of complex, dynamical systems," said Richard Conroy from National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering, US.
     
    The camera may have wider application in areas like biomedicine, astronomy and forensics.
     
    "Combine CUP imaging with the Hubble Telescope, and we will have both the sharpest spatial resolution of the Hubble and the highest temporal solution with CUP," said Wang.
     
    “Each new technique, especially one of a quantum leap forward, is always followed a number of new discoveries. It's our hope that CUP will enable new discoveries in science -- ones that we can't even anticipate yet," said Wang.
     
    The research appeared in the journal Nature.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Efforts on to decipher 'Black Twitter' phenomenon

    Efforts on to decipher 'Black Twitter' phenomenon
    Researchers at the University of Southern California are aiming to study "Black Twitter" to figure out what it means for people to form "neighbourhoods" online....

    Efforts on to decipher 'Black Twitter' phenomenon

    Silicon Valley awaits launch of Apple's iWatch

    Silicon Valley awaits launch of Apple's iWatch
    The Wall Street Journal reported that the gadget would be available in two sizes and will have sensors to monitor heart rate, the number...

    Silicon Valley awaits launch of Apple's iWatch

    Micromax launches Canvas Nitro for Rs.12,990

    Micromax launches Canvas Nitro for Rs.12,990
    “Canvas Nitro is yet another product from the Micromax stable to democratize technology with amalgamation of superior technology, great design and...

    Micromax launches Canvas Nitro for Rs.12,990

    Is Facebook pushing up your phone bill?

    Is Facebook pushing up your phone bill?
    Have you discovered a sudden surge in your phone bill? This could well be linked to reading news feeds on the Facebook mobile app on your phone, media reports suggest...

    Is Facebook pushing up your phone bill?

    Facebook privacy checkup to open for all users

    Facebook privacy checkup to open for all users
    Social networking site Facebook has finally announced to expand its “Privacy Checkup” feature to all users.

    Facebook privacy checkup to open for all users

    Apple to install new security alert after scandal

    Apple to install new security alert after scandal
    Apple CEO Tim Cook has announced that a new security alert will be incorporated in the storage system in iCloud within the next two weeks to prevent leaks such as the one that occurred last weekend involving intimate photos of Hollywood stars.

    Apple to install new security alert after scandal