送交者:rice
送交时间:2006/10/30 12:33
百草园
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Using some new mathematics and a silicon chip covered with hundreds of thousands of mirrors the size of a single bacterium, Kevin Kelly, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering and Richard Baraniuk, the Victor E. Cameron Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering have come up with a more efficient design for digital cameras. Unlike a one-megapixel camera that captures one million points of light for every frame, this camera creates an image by capturing just one point of light, or pixel, several thousands of times in rapid succession. The new mathematics comes into play in assembling the high-resolution image – equal in quality to the one-megapixel image – from the thousands of single-pixel snapshots. A peculiarity about the new camera may be that it works best when the light from the scene under view is scattered at random and turned into noise that looks like television tuned to a dead channel. "White noise is the key," said Richard Baraniuk, "Thanks to some deep new mathematics developed just a couple of years ago, we're able to get a useful, coherent image out of the randomly scattered measurements." Kevin Kelly built a working prototype camera using a digital micromirror device (DMD), and a single photodiode, which turns light into electrical signals. Today's typical retail digital camera has millions of photodiodes, or megapixels, on a single chip.
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