Liquid Lens Can Magnify at the Flick of a Switch 108
An anonymous reader writes "German engineers have designed the first liquid camera lens with no moving parts that provides two levels of zoom. 'Liquid lenses bend light using the curved boundary between watery and oily liquids. When the two liquids are held in the right container, the boundary between them can be made to curve in a way that focuses light simply by applying a voltage. Liquid lenses have attracted much attention because they are potentially smaller than conventional optics and cheaper to build. Samsung has already built them into some cellphones.'"
Lens isn't working (Score:5, Funny)
Seeing double?? (Score:5, Informative)
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I must have had my beer goggles on.
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Don't you mean a mirror?
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I can imagine: Let me put on my glasses. Oh, they are set for concave.
I guess there *is* something to see.
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http://www.adaptive-eyecare.com/ [adaptive-eyecare.com] comes to mind (link from an article in Illustrerad Vetenskap http://www.illvet.se/Crosslink.jsp?a=1218&id=7354_ 2 [illvet.se], a swedish popular science magazine).
This is old (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:This is old (Score:5, Funny)
That, or it's a badly phrased article.
In related news, German scientists have designed the first "circular device for the conveying of people and objects" and the first "source for the creation of heat and light by combustion of a 'fuel'." We may mock but the USPTO will still grant them a patent on the lot of it.
Re:This is old (Score:5, Informative)
Samsung etc. have had liquid lenses, but they haven't been able to do zoom. The German researchers found out how to make it work.
Hope that helps.
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The French company is Varioptic SA [varioptic.com].
Rgds,
Julien
IEEE Spectrum article from 2004 (Score:1)
And here are some Dutch guys doing it 3 years ago:
http://www.spectrum.ieee.org/print/4172 [ieee.org]Shake It (Score:5, Funny)
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Only if you Twist and Shout.
- RG>
Herbert used it in Dune in 1965... (Score:5, Interesting)
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its actually quite interesting and i remember noticing this and thinking i'd get back to it. but once again, there is nothing new under the sun and we see man simply discovering nature and all her mysteries independant of geography, race or creed. i'm more of an amateur mathematician and i've never
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The interesting point here that instead of theory, they have a working prototype.
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Re:Herbert used it in Dune in 1965... (Score:4, Informative)
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The light has to both enter and leave the lens. That's two transitions between materials with different indices of refraction. It matters very much what the angles of incidence are and the relative differences between them.
The way you've worded your post is pretty much a flat contradiction
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The way you've worded your post is pretty much a flat contradiction of all optics since Newton. Go look up what a lens is.
I didn't say the shape of a lens doesn't matter. I said it doesn't alter the refractivity (and by that I mean its index of refraction). Of COURSE it alters the behavior of the lens. Refractivity is an intensive property, the geometry of the lens is an extensive property.
Perhaps my wording wasn't as clear as it should have been. The point stands that the shape of a lens does not alt
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The other guy posting is correct: refraction is only a property of the material and doesn't depend on the shape of the optic. Ultimately where the light rays go and their dependence on the shape of the optic enters into it via Snell's law [wolfram.com].
If you take a slab of material with a constant index of refraction, you can change the path of light rays going through it by changing the shape of the surface of a material, just like you describe. Another way to do it is to take a flat slab of material, like looking
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Secondly, I'm as big a fan of Gomer Pyle as the next guy, but I think spying on Jim Nabors (much less calling him "your" Nabors) is a little over the top.
nearly on-topic: liquid crystal focussing (Score:5, Interesting)
Liquid zoom is quite cool too, but thought this related enough to pass on.
fyi:
http://pubs.acs.org/cen/news/84/i15/8415lenses.ht
(PNAS citation in article)
Hubble (Score:4, Funny)
Earth to Hubble: Adjust lens voltage to 1.537mV.
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Wouldn't it be the Bubble Space telescope?
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What you may be thinking of is optical image stabilization, a movable element in the lens that shifts to compensate for jitter, reducing the need for a tripod. All Lumix cameras incorporate this.
Can I take camera as carry on luggage? (Score:3, Funny)
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with a technology like this... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:with a technology like this... (Score:4, Informative)
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That is, until diffraction effects start to kick in. Had to learn that one the hard way: shooting product shots at a maximum f/29 until discovering mysteriously sharper images at f/12. Now, I'll admit I don't know how much of that truly is diffraction (as opposed to a cheaper lens), but do I know it's something to consider.
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The effect of diffraction is pretty easy to calculate (assuming both your lenses are "perfect" and have circular apertures). The size of the blur spot due to diffraction is roughly 2.44*L*F, where L is the wavelength of light and F is the f-number. So, your f/29 lens has a blur spot that is a little bigger than twice that of the f/12 lens. If you are talking about a digital camera, than it is a bit simpler to compare the blur spot against the pixel size. If it is on film, then you need to compare it aga
No, that's different. (Score:1)
Depth of field just means that sharpness decreases more or less gradually for points at planes parallel to the plane of focus, so that if you aperture is small enough, you get acceptable practical sharpness at a range of distances from the lens, and not just at the plane of focus.
The crucial thing is that by using depth of field, you have the following limitations:
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This has been used for bifocal soft lenses for presbyopia. Focus splitting with diffraction gratings is more commonly used now.
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You don't want multiple focal planes: you want to focus light from different planes to the same focus (the film, detector, whatever). But to answer your question, no - this would not work, no matter what lens medium and scheme you had.
No moving parts? (Score:1)
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Pretty Neat (Score:1)
i am sceptical (Score:1)
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Great for Democracy (Score:2, Insightful)
It seems that police brutality is getting so common now that they are willing to beat members of the media on camera [youtube.com]. (The clip begins with the narrator suggesting that the protestors were "asking for it" by throwing rocks at the police, but they can't spin the footage of their own camerapeople getting beaten up.)
What's worse, is that police now tend to focus o
Re:Great for Democracy (Score:4, Funny)
But if the police police police police, who will police the police police?
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I'm sorry, I don't understand your comment - can you elaborate?
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Clearly... (Score:1)
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Seriously, why turn an article on scientific discovery into a political... essay?
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Hey, wait a second... (Score:1)
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Fewer moving parts? (Score:1)
So if this is such old news, why don't cameras use this technology? Because then they would last too long?
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it's the first liquid lens system that is capable of variable levels of magnification with no moving parts.
then the summary mentions some crap about liquid lenses in general.
and then it mentions how samsung is already using liquid lenses in their cell phones.
no, it doesn't suggest that they use liquid lens systems with variable magnification and no moving parts.
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A little earlier (Score:2, Interesting)
Camera perhaps, but not telescope (Score:2)
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The first beer goggle prelude?
from the summary (Score:1, Redundant)
and this:
i'm not a grammar nazi, but 180 degree contradiction makes the whole summary meaningless. . .
mr c
Might be fine for crap images (Score:1)
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I haven't seen any images taken with these new liquid lenses but I think I'll stick with glass for a little while. It has only been perfected as an optical material for the last 150-200 years. Exactly how long has liquid been used for this purpose? Just like many other innovations in the photographic industry, these are likely to n
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The same could be said about film. Even professionals seem to be using a lot of CCDs today. "Older is better" is not an argument. "Liquid lenses suffer from fundamental geometric limitations" is, but that is not what you said.
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Liquid Lens ? (Score:1)
P.S.: Hint: look at my username
Stupid dylsexia (Score:2)
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