From now on, technically speaking, your camera can already take pictures on corners of the world, but in the development of new cameras adopt different methods: capture the movement of the light itself with the laser system, and a camera, they can be faster than 1.5 billion per second Frame image. The team that created the creative camera is a collaboration between Glasgow University and Heriot-Watt University Edinburgh. The camera analyzes a burst of intense laser images, launches 4000 times per second and is able to reconstruct what is hidden from view. When this light bounces a corner object, it is recorded at a speed of 1.5 billion frames per second by the camera's 32 x 32 pixel sensor. This information is then sent to the computer for analysis of speed and the photon is returned. This allows the algorithm to create a reconstructed object.
If the team can figure out how to make the technology work in real time, potential applications include search and rescue, where it can be used to locate people in hazardous areas; medical imaging; events and surveillance applications, or everyday home security. The camera is displayed at the Royal Society of Science summer science exhibition and there are two other devices: a camera that can capture images with only a single pixel, and a camera that can shoot 3D images with a single lens.