Friday, December 19, 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

    Dress that bares all as your online activity increases!

    Dress that bares all as your online activity increases!
    You have to be careful before liking a picture on Facebook or sending a tweet while you are wearing this dress. Scientists at New York University have designed a dress that gradually turns transparent as the wearer's online activity increases.

    Dress that bares all as your online activity increases!

    Internet not behind newspapers' death: Study

    Internet not behind newspapers' death: Study
    You must have heard - and might be believing by now - that internet sounded the death knell for newspapers. But that may not be true.

    Internet not behind newspapers' death: Study

    Soon, iphone earplugs won't fit in any other device

    Soon, iphone earplugs won't fit in any other device
    You will not be able to use your iPhone earplugs with other devices in the near future.

    Soon, iphone earplugs won't fit in any other device

    Facebook most preferred social networking medium for urban teens'

    Facebook most preferred social networking medium for urban teens'
    Despite a drop in the percentage, Facebook continues to be the preferred social networking playground for teenagers in India's metros and other big cities, according to a survey.

    Facebook most preferred social networking medium for urban teens'

    App that locks kids' gadgets for family meal

    App that locks kids' gadgets for family meal
    Do your kids spend dinner time playing with ipads or smartphones? Try this app that automatically locks their gadgets at meal times to get the family back to the dinner table.

    App that locks kids' gadgets for family meal

    App to help keep 'traveller's diarrhoea at bay

    App to help keep 'traveller's diarrhoea at bay
    For those who are gastronomically adventurous, travelling is hardly any fun without savouring the succulent local dishes and drinks.

    App to help keep 'traveller's diarrhoea at bay