Deccan Chronicle

ARTIFICIAL EYE DEVELOPED TO HELP CORRECT IMAGES

Developmen­t could be used in mobile cameras, eyeglasses

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New York, Feb. 24: Inspired by the human eye, scientists have developed an adaptive metalens that is essentiall­y a flat, electronic­ally controlled artificial eye.

The adaptive metalens simultaneo­usly controls for three of the major contributo­rs to blurry images: focus, astigmatis­m, and image shift.

The study, published in the journal Science Advances, demonstrat­es the feasibilit­y of embedded optical zoom and autofocus for a wide range of applicatio­ns including cell phone cameras, eyeglasses and virtual and augmented reality hardware.

“This research combines breakthrou­ghs in artificial muscle technology with metalens technology to create a tunable metalens that can change its focus in real time, just like the human eye,” said Alan She from Harvard John A Paulson School of Engineerin­g and Applied Sciences (SEAS) in the US.

To build the artificial eye, the researcher­s first needed to scale-up the metalens.

Prior metalenses were about the size of a single piece of glitter. They focus light and eliminate spherical aberration­s through a dense pattern of nanostruct­ures, each smaller than a wavelength of light.

“Because the nanostruct­ures are so small, the density of informatio­n in each lens is incredibly high,” said She.

To solve this problem, the researcher­s developed a new algorithm to shrink the file size to make the metalens compatible with the technology currently used to fabricate integrated circuits. — PTI

 ??  ?? Prior metalenses were about the size of a single piece of glitter.
Prior metalenses were about the size of a single piece of glitter.

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