Millennium Post

World's fastest camera can SEE LIGHT IN SLOW MOTION

-

WASHINGTON DC: Scientists have developed what may be the world's fastest camera, which can capture 10 trillion frames per second -- making it possible to 'freeze time' to see light in extremely slow motion.

The advance may offer insight into as-yet undetectab­le secrets of the interactio­ns between light and matter, according to scientists from California Institute of Technology in the US.

In recent years, the junction between innovation­s in non-linear optics and imaging has opened the door for new and highly efficient methods for microscopi­c analysis of dynamic phenomena in biology and physics. However, harnessing the potential of these methods requires a way to record images in real time at a very short temporal resolution -- in a single exposure.

Using current imaging techniques, measuremen­ts taken with ultrashort laser pulses must be repeated many times, which is appropriat­e for some types of inert samples, but impossible for other more fragile ones. For example, laserengra­ved glass can tolerate only a single laser pulse, leaving less than a picosecond to capture the results. In such a case, the imaging technique must be able to capture the entire process in real time.

Compressed ultrafast photograph­y (CUP) was a good starting point. At 100 billion frames per second, this method approached, but did not meet, the specificat­ions required to integrate femtosecon­d lasers.

To improve on the concept, the new T-CUP system was developed based on a femtosecon­d streak camera that also incorporat­es a data acquisitio­n type used in applicatio­ns such as tomography.

"We knew that by using only a femtosecon­d streak camera, the image quality would be limited," said Lihong Wang, Director of Caltech Optical Imaging Laboratory (COIL).

"So to improve this, we added another camera that acquires a static image. Combined with the image acquired by the femtosecon­d streak camera, we can use what is called a Radon transforma­tion to obtain high-quality images while recording ten trillion frames per second," said Wang.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India