History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging
Transcription
History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging
www.specialised-imaging.com Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging WAI CHAN - SPECIALISED IMAGING LTD Unit 32, Silk Mill Industrial Estate, Brook Street, Tring, Herts HP23 5EF England Tel +44 (0) 1442 827728 History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging www.specialised-imaging.com Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 Basics What Our Eyes See Motion Blur Just Right www.specialised-imaging.com Early Years In 1873 Eadweard Muybridge proved that all 4 hooves were in the air at once when a horse was galloping using high speed imaging History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 www.specialised-imaging.com History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 Early Images What Our Eyes See In 1853 Thomas Skaife was taking photographs of Cannonball in flight at Motion Woolwich Arsenal, LondonBlur In 1888 Ernst Mach photographed shockwave from a bullet travelling faster than the speed of Just photography. Right sound, using schlieren www.specialised-imaging.com History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging Intermittent Motion Camera •Hand-cranked, maximum framing speed 240 frames/second •Exposure is set by exchanging shutter plates •Speed of shutter rotation is synchronised to the speed of the film High Speed Debrie model F from 1928 Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 www.specialised-imaging.com History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 Prism Rotation Rotating Prism Film motion Image motion Feed spool Prism Rotation Sprocket drive •F J Tuttle’s rotating prism concept. •Rotating prism shifts the image in the same direction as the film so that the film does not have to be stopped during the exposures •Basic arrangement of a rotating prism camera – prism rotation must be synchronised to the sprocket drive Sprocket drive Take-up spool Eastman Kodak model 3 rotating prism 16mm film camera - 3000 frames per second. www.specialised-imaging.com Rotating Prism Hadland Hyspeed History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 www.specialised-imaging.com Rotating Mirror Rotating Mirror camera schematic History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 www.specialised-imaging.com History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 Rotating Mirror – Marley Camera Images were formed on the film by an array of camera lenses each with a slightly different viewpoint. The Marley camera was used during the Manhatten project and was used to photograph the actual trinity test in 1945. Capable of 100,000 frames per second www.specialised-imaging.com History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 The Rapatronic Camera •Capable of exposure as short as 10ns •Used a Kerr Cell Shutter •Single Shot •Developed by Harold Edgerton in the 1940s Nuclear explosion less than 1 millisecond after detonation History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging www.specialised-imaging.com Rotating Prism Harold Edgerton is generally credited with pioneering the use of the stroboscope to freeze fast motion. He was professor of Electrical Engineering at MIT and developed the electronic flash which used inert gas to enhance the brightness of an electrical spark. A water droplet rebounding, captured with a fast electronic flash. Harold Edgerton’s famous milk drop picture Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 www.specialised-imaging.com History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging Streak and Strip Cameras Unlike normal cameras that make photographs that have two spatial dimensions, these “strip” or “streak” cameras always display time as one of their dimensions and one subject spatial dimension as their other dimension. Schematic of a rotating mirror streak camera Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 www.specialised-imaging.com History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging Streak Cameras Cordin Drum Streak Camera. Redlake 35mm High Speed HYTAX rocket in flight made with synchroballistic photo c. 1990 Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 www.specialised-imaging.com History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging Streak Cameras Typical Electrostatic streak tube - consists of a photocathode which generates electrons directly from the incident light, then a focusing and accelerating system guides the electron beam through deflection plates to a phosphor screen where the electrons are converted back into light. Schematic layout of typical streak tube. Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 www.specialised-imaging.com Streak Cameras Hadland Imacon675 History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 www.specialised-imaging.com Framing Camera Hadland 790 Framing and streak camera History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 www.specialised-imaging.com History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging ICCD Cameras •40mm gated image intensifier allowed submicrosecond exposures •CCD Camera developed by Polaroid, with 1134x488 pixel resolution •Single Image The Hadland SVRII ballistic Range camera Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 www.specialised-imaging.com Ballistic Range Cameras A typical single-shot ballistic range camera image showing Sabot separation from a 40mm APFSDS round History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 www.specialised-imaging.com History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging Ballistic Range Cameras •40mm gated image intensifier allowing minimum exposure of 20ns •Cooled CCD Head with resolution of 3000 x 4000 @ 12bits •Double Images using interline transfer on the CCD The Specialised Imaging SIRII ballistic range camera. Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 www.specialised-imaging.com History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging Ballistic Range Cameras Typical result from the SIRII camera – this image pair taken in available light (no flash lamps) of a 120mm projectile travelling at approximately 1500m/s with 500ns exposures Image courtesy QinetiQ, Shoeburyness Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging www.specialised-imaging.com Video Systems NAC HSV1000 camera – 1000 fps 1990 Used Modified Video Tape recorder Kodak Ektapro HS4540 – 4500 fps to 40,500 (partial frames) Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 www.specialised-imaging.com History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging ICCD Framing Cameras In the early 1990’s, CCD and intensifier technology was finally applied to the framing camera with the launch of the Hadland Imacon468 468 optical beamsplitter – used a pyramid mirror to divide the incoming light into eight separate paths. Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 www.specialised-imaging.com History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging ICCD Framing Cameras DRS Hadland Imacon200 Imacon200 brochure image Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 www.specialised-imaging.com History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging ICCD Framing Cameras SIM Beamsplitter Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 www.specialised-imaging.com History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging ICCD Framing Cameras An innovation in the optical design of this camera is the unique auxiliary optical port. This allows an additional instrument such as a high-speed video, streak camera or time resolved spectrometer to be coupled to the framing camera, allowing even more information to be gathered about the event being studied Specialised Imaging SIM Framing camera Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 www.specialised-imaging.com History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging ICCD Framing Cameras Supersonic ejecta and shockwaves – image courtesy E2V Technologies, Lincoln Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 www.specialised-imaging.com History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 Projectile/Flight Followers •Concept pioneered by UK and USA defense research establishments •Consists of a computer controlled rotating mirror in front of a high-speed Video camera. •Mirror programmed to rotate at the correct speed such that the camera will “follow” the projectile as it passes •Motion blur removed from projectile – so longer exposures possible to get better images •Disadvantages – small mirror low sensitivity unwieldy system repeatability/accuracy? www.specialised-imaging.com Trajectory Tracker The SIT has been developed to provide consistent and accurate tracking of projectiles in flight using a scanning mirror and high-speed video camera. This equipment allows observations to be made of the behaviour of projectiles in flight for over a hundred metres. The SIT system consists of a rugged mirror and control unit housing, a 3-axis mount, and laptop computer. Courtesy: ISL History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 www.specialised-imaging.com Results View Video Online Click to see the video in action History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 www.specialised-imaging.com History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging Ultra High Speed Video •By 2005 Shimadzu had developed a 1,000,000 fps video camera (HPV-1) •Capable of 312x260 pixel at all speeds •Custom CCD sensor with 100 frames of storage on chip •Recently this was supersede by the HPV-2 Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 www.specialised-imaging.com History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging Ultra High Speed Video Images from 10,000 frames per second video sequence of concrete sample test. Courtesy Shimadzu corporation, Japan. Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 www.specialised-imaging.com History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 Ultra High Speed Video •In 2012 Specialised Imaging launched the Kirana Camera •Capable of up to 5,000,000 fps •924x768 resolution •10 bits dynamic range •180 frames of on pixel storage •Hybrid Sensor combining both CMOS and CCD technology www.specialised-imaging.com History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 Ultra High Speed Video •In 2012 Shimadzu launched the HPV-X •Capable of up to 10,000,000 fps (HP mode)/5,000,000 – 60fps (FP mode) •50,000 pixels (HP mode)/100,000 pixels (400x250) ( FP mode) •10 bits dynamic range •256 frames (HP)/128 frames (FP) •FTCMOS image sensor www.specialised-imaging.com Results History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging www.specialised-imaging.com Acknowledgement Keith Taylor Specialised Imaging, Ltd. Jo Honour Specialised Imaging, Ltd David Bowley Specialised Imaging, Ltd Wayne Smethurst Specialised Imaging, Ltd Richard Briggs Specialised Imaging, Ltd. Frank Kosel Specialised Imaging, Inc. Peter Berkenberg Specialised Imaging, GmbH Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 www.specialised-imaging.com History of the field of Ultra-high speed imaging Image Sensors 2014 - Workshop 1 Thank You QUESTIONS? Specialised Imaging, Unit 32, Silk Mill Industrial Estate, Brook Street, Tring, Herts HP23 5EF England Tel +44 (0) 1442 827728 www.specialised-imaging.com