Called the T-CUP (trillion-frame-per-second compressed ultrafast photography), the camera is capable of achieving single-shot, real-time imaging speeds of up to 10 trillion
frames per second, which is a hundred times greater than the fastest camera out there.
He and his colleagues, led by Caltech's Lihong Wang, have developed what they call T-CUP: the world's fastest camera, capable of capturing ten trillion (1013)
frames per second. This new camera literally makes it possible to freeze time to see phenomena -- and even light!
[USA], Oct 14 ( ANI ): A group of scholars, have developed a camera, which is apparently the world's fastest and is capable of capturing ten trillion
frames per second. With this invention it will be possible to freeze time to see phenomena--in extremely slow motion.
Scientists have recently developed the world's fastest camera, which is able to capture 10 trillion
frames per second. This camera makes it possible to experience any phenomenon in extremely slow motion, similar to freezing time.
While other HD-to-4K upscaler solutions exist in the marketplace, the ability to also achieve 120
frames per second at less than one frame latency sets Dimension apart and establishes a new standard for the rapidly expanding and highly demanding VR users community.
The super slow-motion capture, first on a Samsung phone captures 0.2 seconds of recording at 960
frames per second and plays back in six seconds of each shot but the feature is limited to 20 shots per video.
The current ultrafast imaging techniques are limited by onchip storage and electronic readout speed to operations of about 10 million
frames per second, Khaleej Times reported.
The top DSLR models - Canon EOS 1D Mark 111 and Nikon's D4 - are capable of shooting only 10
frames per second. The built-in Wi-FI and Bluetooth camera has a new autofocus system (NX AF System III) with 205 phase detection points that covers more than 90 per cent of the frame and 209 contrast detection points.
Reportedly, the new IC drives up to 4K Ultra HD (3840 x 2160 pixels) at a refresh rate of 30
frames per second (fps) with dual-DSI interface.
With the ability to record in high definition, the EPIC IO-HD captures all the action of the hunt with sharp, high-definition video at 60
frames per second with crisp, clear audio.