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Electronic Eyeball Uses Curved Image Sensor

AnonymousCoward writes "US researchers have made a digital imaging system designed like the human eyeball — its image sensor is on the inside of a hemisphere like your retina. Resolution is so far low, but finding a way to use silicon sensors this way offers a way around the unavoidable distortion that results from projecting a wide angle view onto a flat sensor."

3 of 35 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Enlighten me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Yes. Perspective correction for flat sensors (or flat film) causes all sorts of problems, from corner softness to chromatic abeeration, and that is why camera "lenses" actually have dozens of elements (i.e., actual lenses) inside them (which in turn cause other problems, like flare). With this kind of design, you can basically get away with using a single lens (for fixed focals, anyway).

  2. Re:Domed lenses by StrategicIrony · · Score: 3, Informative

    Domed CMOS sensors are hard. CMOS is made by photolithography and the layers are set down by lasers etching patterns into silicon wafers.

    Since silicon has a flat crystal structure, it can't easily be made into a curve, so you have to rethink the entire concept of CCD/CMOS digital optical sensors. The phrase "I could never understand why..." generally underscores a..... general lack of understanding. :-)

  3. Re:Enlighten me... by StrategicIrony · · Score: 3, Informative

    i'm sorry.... let's insert some definitions...

    is a curved digital optical sensor "much different" than an array of 6-20 ground glass lenses?

    Why.... yes... it is. :-)