Japanese develop new world's fastest camera 4.4 tri fps

Japanese develop new world's fastest camera 4.4 tri fps

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Baron Greenback

Original Poster:

7,000 posts

151 months

Monday 11th August 2014
quotequote all
Japanese universities develop new world's fastest camera

High-speed photography is a powerful tool for studying fast dynamics in photochemistry, spintronics, phononics, fluidics and plasma physics. Currently, the pump–probe method is the gold standard for time-resolved imaging, but it requires repetitive measurements for image construction and therefore falls short in probing non-repetitive or difficult-to-reproduce events. Here, we present a motion-picture camera that performs single-shot burst image acquisition without the need for repetitive measurements, yet with equally short frame intervals (4.4 trillion frames per second) and high pixel resolution (450 × 450 pixels). The principle of this method—'motion picture femtophotography'—is all-optical mapping of the target's time-varying spatial profile onto a burst stream of sequentially timed photographs with spatial and temporal dispersion. To show the camera's broad utility we use it to capture plasma dynamics and lattice vibrational waves, both of which were previously difficult to observe with conventional methods in a single shot and in real time.

Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2014-08-japanese-universities...

Hate to think of the storage required using that camera.

Halmyre

11,216 posts

140 months

Tuesday 12th August 2014
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I make it 103,597TB (or 103PB) for 1 second's worth of data capture! By comparison, I found this on Wikipedia:

"Music: One petabyte of average MP3-encoded songs (for mobile, roughly one megabyte per minute), would require 2000 years to play"

Moonhawk

10,730 posts

220 months

Thursday 14th August 2014
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Wow.

To give an idea of the possibilities - this is footage from a 1 trillion FPS camera

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bh2kNoEOZEQ

Mr2Mike

20,143 posts

256 months

Tuesday 19th August 2014
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Moonhawk said:
Wow.

To give an idea of the possibilities - this is footage from a 1 trillion FPS camera

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bh2kNoEOZEQ
It's amazing, but it's not really a 1 trillion FPS camera. The actual sample rate is much lower so it requires many iterations of a repeatable event to build up enough frames.