BrahMos WORLD INDIA MADHYA PRADESH BHOPAL WTN SPECIAL GOSSIP CORNER RELIGION SPORTS BUSINESS FUN FACTS ENTERTAINMENT LIFESTYLE TRAVEL ART & LITERATURE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY HEALTH EDUCATION DIASPORA OPINION & INTERVIEW RECIPES DRINKS BIG MEMSAAB 2017 BUDGET 2017 FUNNY VIDEOS VIRAL ON WEB PICTURE STORIES Mahakal Ke Darshan
WTN HINDI ABOUT US PRIVACY POLICY SITEMAP CONTACT US
logo
Breaking News

Camera prototype ditches long lens for distant images

Sunday - April 16, 2017 1:02 pm , Category : DIASPORA
 Camera prototype ditches long lens for distant images
Camera prototype ditches long lens for distant images

New York April 16 (IANS) A team led by an Indian-origin engineer has built a camera prototype that can capture a detailed micron-resolution image from a distance and does that without using a long lens.

The prototype built and tested by engineers at US-based Rice and Northwestern universities uses a laser and techniques borrowed from holography microscopy and Matrix-style bullet time.

It reads a spot illuminated by a laser and captures the speckle pattern with a camera sensor.

Raw data from dozens of camera positions is fed to a computer programme that interprets it and constructs a high-resolution image.

The system known as SAVI -- Synthetic Apertures for long-range subdiffraction-limited Visible Imaging -- only works with coherent illumination sources such as lasers.

Today the technology can be applied only to coherent (laser) light said Ashok Veeraraghavan a Rice University Assistant Professor of electrical and computer engineering in a statement.

That means you cannot apply these techniques to take pictures outdoors and improve resolution for sunlit images -- as yet. Our hope is that one day maybe a decade from now we will have that ability he added.

The technology is the subject of an open-access paper in Science Advances.

Labs led by Veeraraghavan tested the device that compares interference patterns between multiple speckled images.

Veeraraghavan explained the speckles serve as reference beams and essentially replace one of the two beams used to create holograms.

When a laser illuminates a rough surface the viewer sees grain-like speckles in the dot. That s because some of the returning light scattered from points on the surface has farther to go and throws the collective wave out of phase.

SAVI s synthetic aperture sidesteps the problem by replacing a long lens with a computer programme that resolves the speckle data into an image.

You can capture interference patterns from a fair distance. How far depends on how strong the laser is and how far away you can illuminate Veeraraghavan added.

--IANS
sku/ksk/vt