Researchers Developing Single-Pixel Camera
Assassin bug writes "According to the BBC, researchers in the US are developing a single-pixel camera to capture high-quality images without the 'expense' of traditional digital photography. The idea behind such a device is that traditional digital photography is wasteful. Most of the information taken in by the camera is thrown away in the compression process. From the article: 'The digital micromirror device, as it is known, consists of a million or more tiny mirrors each the size of a bacterium. "From that mirror array, we then focus the light through a second lens on to one single photo-detector - a single pixel." As the light passes through the device, the millions of tiny mirrors are turned on and off at random in rapid succession. Complex mathematics then interprets the signals assembling a high resolution image from the thousands of sequential single-pixel snapshots. '"
> Most of the information taken in by the camera is thrown away in the compression process.
Doesn't the RAW format take care of this?
And this story hit the UK Guardian on 9 Nov 2006. (via CS maven my slice of pizza.)
you had me at #!
Is it just me, or does the concept seem inherently more complex and fragile than a multi-pixel sensor with light cast on it?
And how can this possibly deal with the equivalent of a range of shutter speeds in front of a standard sensor? Perhaps it's a matter of how many times the pixel is exposed to the same part of the lens' projection in repeated scans... but that just seems clunky, and that much harder/slower to re-assemble into a stored image.
And it doesn't stop the megapixel chest thumping - it just starts up megamirror arguments, instead.
Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
Of course since you're doing all this with mirrors, you could set up a megapixel array and have different mirrors shine at different pixels simultaneously (just like a DLP). But that seems to defeat the purpose of the whole rig.
What is cool about this is that it could allow HDR(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_dynamic_rang e_imaging) in the camera itself.
While you eye can see many different luminosities of light, a camera has limited contrast. Since it is taking not a single picture, but millions of them in an instant - it could also adjust contrast dynamically.
That would be cool.
At first, I thought this was going to be similar to the method of generating hires images from a small number of sensors utilized by jumping spiders. Basically, they vibrate their retinas, recording datapoints from the in-between locations to get in-between pixels.
Yes, I've read a poem. Try not to faint.