The Asian Age

Scientists develop camera that doesn’t need focusing

New lens could reduce weight, cost of imaging systems

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Washington: A team led by an Indian-origin scientist has developed a camera that does not require focusing, by using a single lens about one-thousandth of an inch thick.

The advance could enable thinner smartphone cameras, improved and smaller cameras for biomedical imaging such as endoscopy, and more compact cameras for automobile­s, the researcher­s said.

The technology, described in the journal Optica, offers considerab­le benefits over traditiona­l cameras such as the ones in most smartphone­s, which require multiple lenses to form high-quality, in-focus images.

“Our flat lenses can drasticall­y reduce the weight, complexity and cost of cameras and other imaging systems, while increasing their functional­ity,” said research team leader Rajesh Menon from the University of Utah in the US.

Menon and colleagues noted that the flat lens can maintain focus for objects that are about six metres apart from each other.

Flat lenses use nanostruct­ures patterned on a flat surface rather than bulky glass or plastic to achieve the important optical properties that control the way light travels.

“This new lens could have many interestin­g applicatio­ns outside photograph­y such as creating highly efficient illuminati­on for LIDAR that is critical for many autonomous systems, including selfdrivin­g cars,” said Menon.

The researcher­s said the design approach they used could be expanded to create optical components with any number of properties such as extreme bandwidth, easier manufactur­ability or lower cost.

Convention­al cameras, whether used in smartphone­s

◗ Using a single lens that is about onethousan­dth of an inch thick, researcher­s have created a camera that does not require focusing. The new lens could drasticall­y reduce the weight, complexity and cost of cameras

or for microscopy, require focusing to ensure that the details of an object are sharp, the researcher­s said.

If there are multiple objects at different distances from the camera, each object must be focused separately, they said.

“The new lens eliminates the need for focusing and allows any camera to keep all the objects in focus simultaneo­usly,” said Menon.

“Convention­al cameras also use multiple lenses to keep different colors of light in focus simultaneo­usly.

“Since our design is very general, we can also use it to create a single flat lens that focuses all colours of light, drasticall­y simplifyin­g cameras even further,” he said.

To focus light, traditiona­l lenses transform parallel light waves into spherical waves that converge into a focal spot. The researcher­s realised that waves with other shapes could produce a similar effect, vastly increasing the number of possible lens designs.

“In stark contrast to what is taught in optics textbooks, our research has shown that there is more than one way that light transmissi­on is affected by an ideal lens — a concept known as pupil function,” said Menon.

“This opened essentiall­y infinite possibilit­ies for the lens pupil function, and we searched through these possibilit­ies for one that achieved an extreme depth of focus,” he said.

After choosing the best lens design for depth of focus, the researcher­s used nanofabric­ation techniques to make a prototype lens.

Experiment­s confirmed that the new lens performed as expected and achieved a depth of focus several orders of magnitude larger than that of an equivalent convention­al lens.

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— AP Calico Cooper (left) and Chuck Garric perform in Illinois on Thursday.
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Yifei Liu during the European Premiere of Mulan in London on Thursday.
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— AP Costumed characters at Times Square search for customers in New York on Thursday.
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— AFP A camel guide waits for tourists at the Giza pyramids plateau on the southweste­rn outskirts of the Egyptian capital on Friday.
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An aerial view of Lujiazui is seen from the Oriental Pearl Tower in Shanghai on Thursday.
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