New Curved Lens From Sony Could Be The Future Of Imaging

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Many different manufacturers are creating new and unique camera technology, but the newest Sony technology mimics the shape of the human eye.

The growing popularity of digital photography, especially smartphone photography, has lead to many technological improvements when it comes to imaging devices.  Many improvements are software related, such as improved filtering or image processing (some manufacturers, such as HTC, even have a dedicated image processing chip), but others are hardware, such as Optical Image Stabilization and HTC’s Ultra-Pixels.

A new curved sensor from Sony sets out to offset the “Petzval field curvature,” which is a performance issue with flat image sensors preventing an image from being brought into proper focus (check Wikipedia for a more technical description).  There is existing equipment in most lenses that compensates for this, but it adds to the expense and size of the module.

Sony’s curved lens answers many of these questions, although it still has more improvements necessary before it is ready for wide usage.  The sensor is currently 2/3rds of an inch long, making it much too large to use in the average smartphone, although it’s only a matter of time before the technology is miniaturized.

The act of bending the edges of the sensor actually has many benefits.  First, it holds a much stronger resemblance to the construction of the human eye, which is a fairly efficient optical construction.  The act of bending the sensor also strains the photodiodes, which results in decreased image noise, while also assisting in the reduction of necessary hardware in the sensor.

Initially, Sony’s curved sensor will only be able to be used in low to mid range digital cameras, but it’s only a matter of time before it will be able to be used in smartphone camera modules, which is where the real benefit is.  Larger cameras can afford the extra hardware necessary for a flat sensor, but for smartphones, millimeters are valuable.

Although some camera phones, such as the Nokia Lumia 1020 have very large sensors in place already, the curved lens also sounds very similar to the large megapixels (aka ultra-pixels) of the cameras on HTC’s One line.  It also might be exclusive to Sony’s devices, since it is their sensor.

Whatever phone it’s in, it’ll b a huge development.  Just one more thing to look forward to in future phones!

Source: Engadget

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Visualized: 121-megapixel satellite photos show Earth in glorious, psychedelic detail (video)

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We're starting to think the Russians have an inside track on high-resolution space photos. When Nokia's 41-megapixel photo of Earth's horizon was just a twinkle in the 808 PureView designers' eyes, the Russian Federal Space Agency had long since finished taking 121-megapixel photos of the whole planet that we're just now seeing in earnest. Unlike NASA photos, which are usually composites of multiple shots, the Elektro-L weather satellite's images display the entire planet in one ridiculously detailed take from 22,369 miles away. Why the trippy colors? Instead of just displaying Earth as-is -- real colors are so passé, dahling -- the satellite layers on near-infrared imagery that paints vegetation in wide swaths of rust-like orange.

You can get a peep of what a day-night cycle looks like for Elektro-L in the video below, and hop over to the sources to get an inkling of just how insanely detailed the images can be. You can also be slightly jealous of the satellite's network connection: at a minimum 2.6Mbps and maximum 16.4Mbps for bandwidth, odds are that it has faster broadband than you do.

Continue reading Visualized: 121-megapixel satellite photos show Earth in glorious, psychedelic detail (video)

Visualized: 121-megapixel satellite photos show Earth in glorious, psychedelic detail (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 May 2012 04:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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