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Technology Science

The Fastest Camera Ever Made Captures 100 Billion Frames Per Second 122

Jason Koebler writes A new imaging technique is able to capture images at 100 billion frames per second—fast enough to watch light interact with objects, which could eventually lead to new cloaking technologies. The camera was developed by a team at Washington University in St. Louis—for the team's first tests, it was able to visualize laser pulse reflections, photons racing through air and through resin, and "faster-than-light propagation of non-information." It can also be used in conjunction with telescopes and to image optical and quantum communications, according to lead researcher Liang Gao.
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The Fastest Camera Ever Made Captures 100 Billion Frames Per Second

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  • by Layzej ( 1976930 ) on Wednesday December 03, 2014 @08:35PM (#48519071)
    Don't tell Peter Jackson
  • No. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Smonson78 ( 2728057 ) on Wednesday December 03, 2014 @08:36PM (#48519077) Homepage
    No... no it isn't. And no you can't. And no they won't.
  • by zlives ( 2009072 ) on Wednesday December 03, 2014 @08:36PM (#48519079)

    yup thats exactly how i feel

    • by AK Marc ( 707885 )
      They wanted to make the distinction that "things" can travel faster than light, but not mass or information.
      • Say you entangle two particles, and separate them by a long distance. You measure your particle, and know what the other particle will read when it is measured. You now have information on what the other side will see, when they measure the particle.

        If you also know some other things about the other side, that it's a deterministic computer, say that will execute a certain action upon reading a "1" and another action upon reading a "0", you now know what the computer at the other side is doing, after you've

        • Sounds like you could replace the entangled particles with a pseudo-random number generator and get the same result.
          You can't say for sure that the other party acted on the result of the particle/PRNG though. You can predict with a high degree of accuracy, but something could have changed (maybe the power went out, or the other side decided to change what happens when it reads a 1).

      • by Uecker ( 1842596 )

        There is actually nothing which travels. Imaging you turn on lights one-by-one in a chain of lights. It would appear as if the light moves. Ofcourse this apparent movement can be made to be faster than the speed of light.

        • by AK Marc ( 707885 )
          The apparent movement is faster than the speed of light. Nothing "travels" but something "moves".
          • by Uecker ( 1842596 )

            I would say there is nothing which moves - atleast nothing physical. There are *different* things happening synchronized in a way that there is the appearance of motion. But talking about "motion" depends on an observer who synthesizes these different events into a motion of a single logical object. Similar to how a mouse pointer moves on a screen. Nothing actually moves. This is simply an illusion, not "propagation of non-information".

            • by AK Marc ( 707885 )
              The illusion moves faster than the speed of light then. And it's not an "illusion". It's real. It's tangible. It's measurable. And it can be viewed from different frames of reference.
              • I've tried, but I can't actually work out what you're disputing in Uecker's comments.

                It's real. It's tangible. It's measurable.

                What is? What's measurable about whatever it is?

                • by AK Marc ( 707885 )
                  He claims that a moving non-object (a shadow, a reflection of light, or a mouse cursor) isn't real. They are real. They can be seen, they can be measured and defined. And they can move faster than the speed of light.

                  If you can't understand what I'm disputing in his comments, read my comments he replied to and tell me what he's disputing. If that's confusing, go up a few levels to my original comment, and his original objection, and tell me what he's objecting to in that one.
                  • by Uecker ( 1842596 )

                    Ok, I try again.

                    He claims that a moving non-object (a shadow, a reflection of light, or a mouse cursor) isn't real. They are real.

                    Of course the reflections are real. The movement is not real.

                    They can be seen, they can be measured and defined. And they can move faster than the speed of light.

                    They are real, but the movement is not. There is no movement of anything - because the reflections you see at different times are different reflections. They are just synchronized in some way to make it appear as there were moving - in other words: it is an illusion. Different things appearing at different places at different times is not movement. Do you know the story of the Hare and the Hedgehog?

                    • by AK Marc ( 707885 )
                      Then "an illusion" is "a thing". With that definition, everything I've said is 100% correct. You are just arguing over the definition of "thing". And most people would assert that one single continuous beam of light is not a collection of (near) infinite different things. There is no "trick" It is not The Prestige (or the Hare and the Hedgehog) where a body double makes a trick where non-movement gets a different thing to the other place first. The single shadow/beam passes over all points on the way
  • Fastest, ehh? (Score:4, Informative)

    by Bengie ( 1121981 ) on Wednesday December 03, 2014 @08:51PM (#48519141)
    World's Fastest Camera Captures 4.4 Trillion Frames Per Second August 14, 2014
    http://tech.slashdot.org/story... [slashdot.org]
  • by Anonymous Coward

    and 180 x 96 picture elements. Wake me up when it's 4k rez.

    • Each of us serves a purpose in the ecosystem.

      Without you tech snobs, they'd simply never recoup R & D expenses.

    • You just need to buy 20 of them (give or take).
    • by aiht ( 1017790 )
      I'm intrigued by the data transfer requirements.
      Even given your extremely low res in b/w, I make that 196TB per second.

      Since I can't find any source for your specs and the sample videos are clearly not black and white, I presume you're joking.
      If it's just grayscale that they've coloured in later, that's 1.5PB per second; full RGB 4.5PB/s.
      These are all under-estimates, too, since it looks like the res is much higher than your 180x96.

      What sort of transmission / storage tech are they using? Electrons do
      • by Arkh89 ( 2870391 )

        They acquire only for a very very short lapse of time (in the order of a ps) and perform compression before the acquisition (compressed-sensing).
        They cannot record longer than this because of how slow the sensor in the back of the streak camera is.

  • by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Wednesday December 03, 2014 @09:01PM (#48519191) Journal

    "faster-than-light propagation of non-information" -- Politicians will looove that technology

    • by Maow ( 620678 )

      "faster-than-light propagation of non-information" -- Politicians will looove that technology

      Old news, Slashdot has already had this feature for a long time.

  • Didn't MIT already show off their Femtosecond camera in a TED talk a few years back? That's 1 trillion per second, so this new one is slower!
    • It wasn't 1 trillion in the same second. They had to image the action multiple times to get all the little slices of time to make up the animation.

      This one, apparently, can image a single event in it's entirety.

  • Youtube is going to need to dramatically increase their server capacity. There's a lot of non-information posted there.

  • Time to repurpose the interferometer to try all the old experiments, especially Michelson-Morley one.

  • by Ukab the Great ( 87152 ) on Wednesday December 03, 2014 @09:51PM (#48519375)

    But the costs for developing all that film would be outrageous..

  • Billions of Frames per second versus trillions of cycles per second must make for quite the choppy video!

  • by skaag ( 206358 ) on Thursday December 04, 2014 @01:20AM (#48520129) Homepage Journal

    If it can watch photons move, what exactly transfers the existence of those photons to the camera's sensor? some of the photons that refract from dust and air?

  • to capture a politician being honest.

  • A camera that can catch a woman with her mouth closed.

  • It is said that "a picture is worth a thousand words".

    How much does 100 billion pictures worth ?

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