Multiscale gigapixel photography

Brady, D. J.; Gehm, M. E.; Stack, R. A.; Marks, D. L.; Kittle, D. S.; Golish, D. R.; Vera, E. M.; Feller, S. D.

Abstract

Pixel count is the ratio of the solid angle within a camera's field of view to the solid angle covered by a single detector element. Because the size of the smallest resolvable pixel is proportional to aperture diameter and the maximum field of view is scale independent, the diffraction-limited pixel count is proportional to aperture area. At present, digital cameras operate near the fundamental limit of 1-10 megapixels for millimetre-scale apertures, but few approach the corresponding limits of 1-100 gigapixels for centimetre-scale apertures. Barriers to high-pixel-count imaging include scale-dependent geometric aberrations, the cost and complexity of gigapixel sensor arrays, and the computational and communications challenge of gigapixel image management. Here we describe the AWARE-2 camera, which uses a 16-mm entrance aperture to capture snapshot, one-gigapixel images at three frames per minute. AWARE-2 uses a parallel array of microcameras to reduce the problems of gigapixel imaging to those of megapixel imaging, which are more tractable. In cameras of conventional design, lens speed and field of view decrease as lens scale increases(1), but with the experimental system described here we confirm previous theoretical results(2-6) suggesting that lens speed and field of view can be scale independent in microcamera-based imagers resolving up to 50 gigapixels. Ubiquitous gigapixel cameras may transform the central challenge of photography from the question of where to point the camera to that of how to mine the data.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:000305466800040 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: NATURE
Volumen: 486
Número: 7403
Editorial: NATURE PORTFOLIO
Fecha de publicación: 2012
Página de inicio: 386
Página final: 389
DOI:

10.1038/nature11150

Notas: ISI