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Related Concept Videos

Gauss's Law: Spherical Symmetry01:26

Gauss's Law: Spherical Symmetry

A charge distribution has spherical symmetry if the density of charge depends only on the distance from a point in space and not on the direction. In other words, if the system is rotated, it doesn't look different. For instance, if a sphere of radius R is uniformly charged with charge density ρ0, then the distribution has spherical symmetry. On the other hand, if a sphere of radius R is charged so that the top half of the sphere has a uniform charge density ρ1 and the bottom half has a uniform...
Spherical Coordinates01:23

Spherical Coordinates

Spherical coordinate systems are preferred over Cartesian, polar, or cylindrical coordinates for systems with spherical symmetry. For example, to describe the surface of a sphere, Cartesian coordinates require all three coordinates. On the other hand, the spherical coordinate system requires only one parameter: the sphere's radius. As a result, the complicated mathematical calculations become simple. Spherical coordinates are used in science and engineering applications like electric and...
Gauss's Law: Cylindrical Symmetry01:20

Gauss's Law: Cylindrical Symmetry

A charge distribution has cylindrical symmetry if the charge density depends only upon the distance from the axis of the cylinder and does not vary along the axis or with the direction about the axis. In other words, if a system varies if it is rotated around the axis or shifted along the axis, it does not have cylindrical symmetry. In real systems, we do not have infinite cylinders; however, if the cylindrical object is considerably longer than the radius from it that we are interested in,...
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Influence of Earth's Curvature and Atmospheric Refraction on Leveling

During leveling, the Earth's curvature and atmospheric refraction introduce deviations in the line of sight from a true horizontal reference. When the line of sight is leveled, it remains perpendicular to the plumb line only at a single point. Beyond this, it deviates due to the Earth’s curvature, represented by the correction C. For a sight distance D, the deviation can be derived using the relationship:This relationship shows that the deviation increases quadratically with distance. Over a...
Gauss's Law: Planar Symmetry01:27

Gauss's Law: Planar Symmetry

A planar symmetry of charge density is obtained when charges are uniformly spread over a large flat surface. In planar symmetry, all points in a plane parallel to the plane of charge are identical with respect to the charges. Suppose the plane of the charge distribution is the xy-plane, and the electric field at a space point P with coordinates (x, y, z) is to be determined. Since the charge density is the same at all (x, y) - coordinates in the z = 0 plane, by symmetry, the electric field at P...
Focusing of Light in the Eye01:16

Focusing of Light in the Eye

Light rays enter the eye through the cornea, a transparent dome-shaped tissue that is the eye's outermost layer. The cornea bends or refracts, light rays traveling to the pupil. The shape of the cornea determines how much of the light is bent and whether the image will be focused correctly on the retina at the back of the eye. Once the light has passed through both refraction layers, it converges into a single focal point onto a small area. This is where photoreceptors start transforming...

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Determining 3D Flow Fields via Multi-camera Light Field Imaging
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Published on: March 6, 2013

Scaling law for computational imaging using spherical optics.

Oliver S Cossairt1, Daniel Miau, Shree K Nayar

  • 1Computer Science Department, Columbia University, New York, New York 10027, USA. ollie@cs.columbia.edu

Journal of the Optical Society of America. A, Optics, Image Science, and Vision
|December 24, 2011
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Researchers found that camera resolution can surpass aberration limits using post-capture deblurring and image priors. This enables high-resolution computational cameras with compact designs and simplified complexity.

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Area of Science:

  • Optics and Photonics
  • Computational Imaging
  • Computer Vision

Background:

  • Camera system resolution dictates image fidelity, crucial for automated vision tasks like object detection.
  • Geometric aberrations traditionally limit lens resolution, creating a perceived threshold.
  • Existing methods struggle to overcome these inherent optical limitations.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate methods for enhancing camera system resolution beyond traditional aberration limits.
  • To demonstrate a novel computational camera design for achieving high resolution.
  • To analyze the performance-complexity trade-offs in such systems.

Main Methods:

  • Derivation of an analytic scaling law for lenses with spherical aberrations.
  • Application of post-capture deblurring techniques.
  • Integration of image priors to further boost resolution.
  • Development and testing of a proof-of-concept gigapixel camera.

Main Results:

  • An analytic scaling law shows resolution can exceed aberration limits via deblurring.
  • Image priors further enhance resolution capabilities.
  • A gigapixel camera prototype achieved high resolution with a compact, low-complexity design.

Conclusions:

  • It is possible to overcome traditional resolution limits in camera systems.
  • Computational camera designs utilizing spherical lenses and multiple sensors offer a viable path to high resolution.
  • The study provides insights into the performance-complexity trade-offs for advanced imaging systems.