1,000,000,000,000 fps...

Arkadrel

Diamond Member
Oct 19, 2010
3,681
2
0
Wow.... this technology is insane.

Could allows you to see though skin/muscle ect tissues, without the need of X-rays.
Could allow fire fighters to snap a piture though a window, see whats inside room (people?)
Could allow (if every avalible in a phone) to check if fruit is ripe by takeing a picture.
ect
ect
ect

Just insane, to not even mention that their able to capture movement of light.
Pretty cool :)

That dude leading the project at MIT, needs to get a grant for futher developeing this technology.
 

HURRIC4NE

Member
Apr 17, 2012
173
0
0
can someone calculate what type of a GPU would i need to reach a billion FPS in Battlefield 3? i want to see a bullet hit a soldier in the head.
 

ShadowVVL

Senior member
May 1, 2010
758
0
71
I enjoyed that, thank you for posting it grooveriding.

I still looks like its got a long way to go,I am guessing it will take a long time to perfect it.
 

hyrule4927

Senior member
Feb 9, 2012
359
1
76
That's pretty awesome. Personally the part I found most interesting was how the image at the end was affected by time distortion. This technology makes it possible to actually see one of the coolest (in my opinion) aspects of quantum physics.
 

Grooveriding

Diamond Member
Dec 25, 2008
9,147
1,329
126
I'm sure there are many uses for further iteration of this technology, the medical imaging is the one I found most interesting. It is relevant to my workplace and the possibilities for imaging without the need for harmful radiation are pretty amazing. :thumbsup:

This could revolutionize procedures like angiograms.

It's also just really cool to actually see light in motion. :cool:
 

Keysplayr

Elite Member
Jan 16, 2003
21,211
50
91
Truly Fantastic. So it would take an entire year for a bullet to travel the distance we saw the light travel in a few seconds (to us) through that coke bottle. That has to be the coolest thing I've seen to date.
 

Arkadrel

Diamond Member
Oct 19, 2010
3,681
2
0
I need this for iPhone 5S.

1) The camra was the size of a big table.

2) They probably had to do tons of "repeat" recordings to string together
(so it wont work as a quick picture snap like by a phone)

3) They probably used a super computere to peice together the collected data.


Its unrealistic to expect this to show up in a phone, in any near future.
Maybe someday thought it could :) which would be totally badass.
 

bryanW1995

Lifer
May 22, 2007
11,144
32
91
That's pretty awesome. Personally the part I found most interesting was how the image at the end was affected by time distortion. This technology makes it possible to actually see one of the coolest (in my opinion) aspects of quantum physics.

My 4 and 6 year olds are about to learn something new... :)

AWESOME video.

1) The camra was the size of a big table.

2) They probably had to do tons of "repeat" recordings to string together
(so it wont work as a quick picture snap like by a phone)

3) They probably used a super computere to peice together the collected data.


Its unrealistic to expect this to show up in a phone, in any near future.
Maybe someday thought it could :) which would be totally badass.

You're right, we probably won't get this until at least the iphone 6... ;)