Imaging at One Trillion Frames per Second

By Ramesh Raskar and Christopher Barsi

High-speed imaging is a long-standing goal in optics, with applications in spectral dynamics, motion analysis, and three-dimensional imaging. Currently, commercially available systems can offer sensors operating at one million frames per second at reduced spatial resolution.1 In the lab setting, serial time-encoding of 2D images have provided 100 ps shutter speeds.2 Recently, researchers at the MIT Media Lab, in the Camera Culture group, led by Professor Ramesh Raskar, have developed a camera system that has an effective time resolution of 2 ps, roughly one half of a trillion frames per second.3

Raskar’s system is centered on repurposing a well-known device called a streak sensor, which is capable of recording 2 ps time scales, and an ultrafast femtosecond Titanium: Sapphire laser. In this system, the laser illuminates a scene of interest, and the streak sensor records the scattered light. Unfortunately, on its own, the streak sensor has several drawbacks. First, with an effective exposure time of 2 ps, the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) is incredibly low, and any scattered light would be buried in noise. Second, the streak sensor itself has a one-dimensional aperture, so that it can image only a single horizontal line of a scene. Third, given the time resolution, a mechanism must be in place to synchronize the laser with the detector.

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ICALEO 2013 Boasts Innovative Laser-Driven Manufacturing Research & Technology

By Geoff Giordano

ORLANDO, FL, November 6, 2013 – Ultrafast lasers are allowing humans to “see” objects around corners and facilitate the “printing” of human cells, attendees of the Laser Institute of America’s (LIA) 32nd International Congress on Applications of Lasers and Electro-Optics (ICALEO®) learned Oct. 6-10 in Miami.

About 100 first-time participants joined more than 400 of their peers at ICALEO 2013 to hear roughly 200 presentations detailing the latest research in laser-driven manufacturing, including the white-hot area of additive manufacturing. Additive manufacturing (AM) was the focus of the closing slate of five addresses looking at fabrication in the micro and nano scales as well as the increasing use of AM to make parts for the automotive, aerospace and medical industries.

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High Speed Laser Engraving in Anti-Counterfeiting

Counterfeiting is a major and global problem for the pharmaceutical industries, with extremely important societal and economic consequences. It is for instance estimated that 10% of global pharmaceutical sales are conterfeit products, with a much higher ratio in Africa and parts of Asia. In addition to serious health issues, especially in developing countries, the revenue loss for the pharmaceutical industry is estimated at more than $16 billion. Counterfeiting is also a new and relatively safe domain of expansion for organized crime and terrorist organizations. Continue reading