World's Fastest Camera Represents a New Type of Imaging
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By MedImaging International staff writers Posted on 27 May 2009 |
Researchers have developed a novel, continuously running camera that captures images about 1,000 times faster than any existing conventional camera.
Ultrafast, light-sensitive video cameras are needed for observing high-speed events such as shockwaves, communication between living cells, neural activity, laser surgery, and elements of blood analysis. To capture such elusive moments, a camera must be able to capture millions or billions of images continuously with a very high frame rate. Conventional cameras are simply not up to the task.
In an article in the April 30, 2009, issue of the journal Nature, University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science (USA) researchers Drs. Keisuke Goda, Kevin Tsia, and team leader Bahram Jalali describe an entirely new approach to imaging that does not require a traditional CCD (charge-coupled device) or CMOS (complementary metal-oxide semiconductor) video camera. Building on more than 10 years of research on photonic time stretch, a technique for capturing elusive events, the team has demonstrated a camera that captures images at some 6 million frames per second.
"The most demanding application for high-speed imaging involves fast events that are very rare, rogue events or the proverbial needle in the haystack--in other words, unusual events that carry important information,” said Dr. Jalali, a professor of electrical engineering and principal investigator of the project.
One of the applications he envisions for the camera is flow cytometry, a technique used for blood analysis. Traditional blood analyzers can count cells and extract information about their size, but they cannot take pictures of every cell because no camera is fast and sensitive enough for the task. At the same time, images of cells are needed to distinguish diseased cells from healthy ones. Currently, images are taken manually under a microscope from a very small sample of blood.
But what if you needed to detect the presence of very rare cells that although few in number signify the early stages of a disease? Circulating tumor cells are a perfect example. Typically, there are only a handful of them among a billion healthy cells; yet these cells are precursors to metastasis, the spread of cancer that causes about 90% of cancer mortalities.
"The chance that one of these cells will happen to be on the small sample of blood viewed under a microscope is negligible,” Dr. Jalali said. "To find these rogue cells--needles in the haystack--you need to analyze billions of cells, the entire haystack. Ultra-high-speed imaging of cells in flow is a potential solution for detection of rare abnormal cells.”
The new imager operates by capturing each picture with an ultrashort laser pulse--a flash of light only a billionth of a second long. It then converts each pulse to a serial data stream that resembles the data in a fiberoptic network rather than the signal coming out of a camera. Using a technique known as amplified dispersive Fourier transform, these laser pulses, each containing an entire picture, are amplified and simultaneously stretched in time to the point that they are slow enough to be captured with an electronic digitizer.
The essential problem in performing high-speed imaging, according to Dr. Jalali, is that the camera becomes less and less sensitive at higher and higher speeds. It is simple to understand why: At high frame rates, there is less time to collect photons in each frame before the signal becomes weaker and more prone to noise. The new imager overcomes this because it is the first to feature optical image amplification.
"Our serial time-encoded amplified microscopy [STEAM] technology enables continuous real-time imaging at a frame rate of more than 6 MHz, a shutter speed of less than 450 ps, and an optical image gain of more than 300--the world's fastest continuously running camera, useful for studying rapid phenomena in physics, chemistry, and biology,” said research coauthor Dr. Goda, a postdoctoral researcher in the group.
One such phenomenon the group has studied with the new camera is laser ablation, an important technology that is the basis of laser medicine. The camera can capture laser ablation happening in real time, providing important clues for understanding the process and optimizing its effectiveness. "Unlike other high-speed imaging methods, our approach does not require cooling of the camera or high-intensity illumination--problems that plague conventional CCD and CMOS cameras,” said Kevin Tsia, a graduate student in the group and a coauthor of the research.
Related Links:
UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science
Ultrafast, light-sensitive video cameras are needed for observing high-speed events such as shockwaves, communication between living cells, neural activity, laser surgery, and elements of blood analysis. To capture such elusive moments, a camera must be able to capture millions or billions of images continuously with a very high frame rate. Conventional cameras are simply not up to the task.
In an article in the April 30, 2009, issue of the journal Nature, University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science (USA) researchers Drs. Keisuke Goda, Kevin Tsia, and team leader Bahram Jalali describe an entirely new approach to imaging that does not require a traditional CCD (charge-coupled device) or CMOS (complementary metal-oxide semiconductor) video camera. Building on more than 10 years of research on photonic time stretch, a technique for capturing elusive events, the team has demonstrated a camera that captures images at some 6 million frames per second.
"The most demanding application for high-speed imaging involves fast events that are very rare, rogue events or the proverbial needle in the haystack--in other words, unusual events that carry important information,” said Dr. Jalali, a professor of electrical engineering and principal investigator of the project.
One of the applications he envisions for the camera is flow cytometry, a technique used for blood analysis. Traditional blood analyzers can count cells and extract information about their size, but they cannot take pictures of every cell because no camera is fast and sensitive enough for the task. At the same time, images of cells are needed to distinguish diseased cells from healthy ones. Currently, images are taken manually under a microscope from a very small sample of blood.
But what if you needed to detect the presence of very rare cells that although few in number signify the early stages of a disease? Circulating tumor cells are a perfect example. Typically, there are only a handful of them among a billion healthy cells; yet these cells are precursors to metastasis, the spread of cancer that causes about 90% of cancer mortalities.
"The chance that one of these cells will happen to be on the small sample of blood viewed under a microscope is negligible,” Dr. Jalali said. "To find these rogue cells--needles in the haystack--you need to analyze billions of cells, the entire haystack. Ultra-high-speed imaging of cells in flow is a potential solution for detection of rare abnormal cells.”
The new imager operates by capturing each picture with an ultrashort laser pulse--a flash of light only a billionth of a second long. It then converts each pulse to a serial data stream that resembles the data in a fiberoptic network rather than the signal coming out of a camera. Using a technique known as amplified dispersive Fourier transform, these laser pulses, each containing an entire picture, are amplified and simultaneously stretched in time to the point that they are slow enough to be captured with an electronic digitizer.
The essential problem in performing high-speed imaging, according to Dr. Jalali, is that the camera becomes less and less sensitive at higher and higher speeds. It is simple to understand why: At high frame rates, there is less time to collect photons in each frame before the signal becomes weaker and more prone to noise. The new imager overcomes this because it is the first to feature optical image amplification.
"Our serial time-encoded amplified microscopy [STEAM] technology enables continuous real-time imaging at a frame rate of more than 6 MHz, a shutter speed of less than 450 ps, and an optical image gain of more than 300--the world's fastest continuously running camera, useful for studying rapid phenomena in physics, chemistry, and biology,” said research coauthor Dr. Goda, a postdoctoral researcher in the group.
One such phenomenon the group has studied with the new camera is laser ablation, an important technology that is the basis of laser medicine. The camera can capture laser ablation happening in real time, providing important clues for understanding the process and optimizing its effectiveness. "Unlike other high-speed imaging methods, our approach does not require cooling of the camera or high-intensity illumination--problems that plague conventional CCD and CMOS cameras,” said Kevin Tsia, a graduate student in the group and a coauthor of the research.
Related Links:
UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science
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