Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

This New Camera May Capture Distant Images Without Long Lens

Darpan News Desk IANS, 16 Apr, 2017 12:58 PM
  • This New Camera May Capture Distant Images Without Long Lens
Scientists, including one of Indian origin, have developed a unique camera that can capture detailed images of distant objects without using a long lens, an advance that could lead to telescopes that are less bulky.
 
The system known as SAVI - for “Synthetic Apertures for long-range, subdiffraction-limited Visible Imaging” - does not need a long lens to take a picture of a faraway object, researchers said.
 
The prototype built by researchers 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.
 
 Researchers including those from Rice University in the US, built and tested the device that compares interference patterns between multiple speckled images.
 
Like the technique used to achieve the “Matrix” special effect, the images are taken from slightly different angles, but with one camera that is moved between shots instead of many fired in sequence.
 
The prototype only works with coherent illumination sources such as lasers.
 
However, it is a step toward a SAVI camera array for use in visible light, researchers said.
 
The speckles serve as reference beams and essentially replace one of the two beams used to create holograms, researchers said.
 
When a laser illuminates a rough surface, the viewer sees grain-like speckles in the dot, as some of the returning light scattered from points on the surface has to go farther and throws the collective wave out of phase.
 
 
The texture of a piece of paper - or even a fingerprint - is enough to cause the effect.
 
“Today, the technology can be applied only to coherent (laser) light,” said Ashok Veeraraghavan of Rice University.
 
“That means you cannot apply these techniques to take pictures outdoors and improve resolution for sunlit images - as yet,” Veeraraghavan said.
 
“With a traditional camera, the larger the physical size of the aperture, the better the resolution,” he said.
 
“If you want an aperture that is half a foot, you may need 30 glass surfaces to remove aberrations and create a focused spot. This makes your lens very big and bulky,” he added.
 
SAVI’s “synthetic aperture” sidesteps the problem by replacing a long lens with a computer programme the resolves the speckle data into an image, researchers said.
 
“You can capture interference patterns from a fair distance,” Veeraraghavan said.
 
The research was published in the journal Science Advances.

MORE Tech ARTICLES

Johns Hopkins Researchers Find Flaw In iMessage Encryption

Johns Hopkins Researchers Find Flaw In iMessage Encryption
A team from Johns Hopkins University says it found a security bug in iMessage, the encrypted messaging platform used on Apple's phones and other devices. The bug would allow hackers under certain circumstances to decrypt some messages.

Johns Hopkins Researchers Find Flaw In iMessage Encryption

Facebook Explores If Jobs Run In Families Like Genes

Not only genes, even jobs may run in some families, and people within a family are proportionally more likely to eventually also choose the same occupation and this is especially true of twins, a Facebook study has revealed.

Facebook Explores If Jobs Run In Families Like Genes

Apple Launches Cheaper 4-Inch iPhone SE, 9.7-inch iPad Pro

Apple Launches Cheaper 4-Inch iPhone SE, 9.7-inch iPad Pro
Aiming to make deeper inroads into the emerging markets like India and China, tech giant Apple on Monday stunned its rivals by launching a cheaper, smaller yet powerful iPhone SE and a game changer 9.7-inch iPad Pro

Apple Launches Cheaper 4-Inch iPhone SE, 9.7-inch iPad Pro

Instagram Says It Will Show Posts In Order Of 'Relevance'

If that sounds familiar, it's because that's how Facebook decides what to show users of its online social network. 

Instagram Says It Will Show Posts In Order Of 'Relevance'

Robotics Expert: Self-driving Cars Not Ready For Deployment

Robotics Expert: Self-driving Cars Not Ready For Deployment
Self-driving cars are "absolutely not" ready for widespread deployment despite a rush to put them to put them on the road, a robotics expert warned Tuesday.

Robotics Expert: Self-driving Cars Not Ready For Deployment

Google Reveals 77 Per Cent Of Its Online Traffic Is Encrypted

Google Reveals 77 Per Cent Of Its Online Traffic Is Encrypted
Encryption shields 77 per cent of the requests sent from around the world to Google's data centres, up from 52 per cent at the end of 2013, according to company statistics released Tuesday.

Google Reveals 77 Per Cent Of Its Online Traffic Is Encrypted