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Tiny lens-free camera takes pixel-perfect pictures

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Compiled by BioPhotonics staff

A microscopic device that fits on the head of a pin, contains no lenses or moving parts, and costs just pennies to make could someday revolutionize surgery, robotics and other science applications. The camera, invented and developed by a group led by Cornell University postdoc Patrick Gill in the lab of Alyosha Molnar, is one-hundredth millimeter thick and one-half millimeter on each side. It resolves images about 20 pixels across. The quality does not compare to that of portraits done in a studio, but it is sufficient to shed light on things previously hard to see. Gill, whose...Read full article

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    Published: September 2011
    Glossary
    fourier transform
    Any of the various methods of decomposing a signal into a set of coefficients of orthogonal waveforms (trigonometric functions).
    micro-robotics
    Micro-robotics refers to the field of robotics that involves the design, development, and application of miniature robotic systems, often at the microscale. These robots, commonly referred to as micro-robots or microbots, are characterized by their small size, typically ranging from a fraction of a millimeter to a few centimeters. Micro-robotics leverages principles from various disciplines, including robotics, microengineering, materials science, and often incorporates microelectromechanical...
    Alyosha MolnarAmericasBiophotonicsBioScancamera on flat piece of doped siliconcamera with no lensescamerasCornell Universityelectronic systemsFourier transformImagingindustrialmicro-roboticsmicroscopic cameraneuronsNew YorkNewsPatrick GillPFCApinhead-size cameraplanar Fourier capture arrayroboticssurgery

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