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posted by janrinok on Friday January 24 2020, @01:42AM   Printer-friendly
from the smile-ple....-too-late! dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:

A little over a year ago, Caltech's Lihong Wang developed the world's fastest camera, a device capable of taking 10 trillion pictures per second. It is so fast that it can even capture light traveling in slow motion.

But sometimes just being quick is not enough. Indeed, not even the fastest camera can take pictures of things it cannot see. To that end, Wang, Bren Professor of Medical Engineering and Electrical Engineering, has developed a new camera that can take up to 1 trillion pictures per second of transparent objects. A paper about the camera appears in the January 17 issue of the journal Science Advances.

The camera technology, which Wang calls phase-sensitive compressed ultrafast photography (pCUP), can take video not just of transparent objects but also of more ephemeral things like shockwaves and possibly even of the signals that travel through neurons.

Wang explains that his new imaging system combines the high-speed photography system he previously developed with an old technology, phase-contrast microscopy, that was designed to allow better imaging of objects that are mostly transparent such as cells, which are mostly water.

Phase-contrast microscopy, invented nearly 100 years ago by Dutch physicist Frits Zernike, works by taking advantage of the way that light waves slow down and speed up as they enter different materials. For example, if a beam of light passes through a piece of glass, it will slow down as it enters the glass and then speed up again as it exits. Those changes in speed alter the timing of the waves. With the use of some optical tricks it is possible to distinguish light that passed through the glass from light that did not, and the glass, though transparent, becomes much easier to see.

-- submitted from IRC

Journal Reference:

Taewoo Kim, Jinyang Liang, Liren Zhu, Lihong V. Wang. Picosecond-resolution phase-sensitive imaging of transparent objects in a single shot. Science Advances, 2020; 6 (3): eaay6200 DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.aay6200


Original Submission

 
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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday January 24 2020, @03:18PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday January 24 2020, @03:18PM (#947958)

    Just a few days ago I was reading Zernike's Nobel Prize lecture How I Discovered Phase Contrast [nobelprize.org].

    I recommend it for a good read if you want to see what this phase contrast stuff is all about. You don't need much specialized knowledge, just an understanding of what two waves out of phase physically means.