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    MIT’s trillion-frames-per-second camera can capture light as it travels

    By Tod Perry,

    2 days ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1UuhmW_0unNj3lC00

    A new camera developed at MIT can photograph a trillion frames per second.

    Compare that with a traditional movie camera which takes a mere 24. This new advancement in photographic technology has given scientists the ability to photograph the movement of the fastest thing in the Universe, light.


    The actual event occurred in a nano second, but the camera has the ability to slow it down to twenty seconds.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3FoBy1_0unNj3lC00

    Photo from YouTube video.

    The amazing camera.

    For some perspective, according to New York Times writer, John Markoff, "If a bullet were tracked in the same fashion moving through the same fluid, the resulting movie would last three years."


    In the video below, you'll see experimental footage of light photons traveling 600-million-miles-per-hour through water.

    youtu.be

    Super Fast Cameras

    It's impossible to directly record light so the camera takes millions of scans to recreate each image. The process has been called femto-photography and according to Andrea Velten, a researcher involved with the project, "There's nothing in the universe that looks fast to this camera."

    (H/T Curiosity )


    This article originally appeared on 09.08.17

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