An Origami Lens for Your Camera Phone? 69
Roland Piquepaille writes "Your next camera phone might get a new kind of lens if researchers at the University of California at San Diego convince the cell phones makers. They have designed an 'origami lens' which will slim high resolution cameras. Today, their 5-millimeter thick, 8-fold imager delivers images comparable in quality with photos taken with a compact camera lens with a 38 millimeter focal length. In a few years, these bendable lenses could be used in high resolution miniature cameras for unmanned surveillance aircraft, cell phones and infrared night vision applications."
no iPhone for me then... (Score:1, Troll)
OK, just kidding there.
Mods, learn to read! was: no iPhone for me then... (Score:2)
No, it's not even a lens (Score:3, Informative)
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One uses a crystal.
Be afrade, be very afrade!
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The advantage is, of course, the reduced thickness. These can be mounted on the skin of a surveillance device and not protrude like a lens would.
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who cares about image quality? (Score:5, Funny)
You misspelled "burn the shit out of stuff"
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I just tried this with my own camera.
You owe me a new Canon 350D.
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To reduce camera thickness but retain good light collection and high-resolution capabilities, Tremblay and colleagues replaced the traditional lens with a "folded" optical system that is based on an extension of conventional astronomical telescopes that employed mirrors, such as the Cassegrain telescope, which was developed in 1672.
More here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cassegrain_reflector [wikipedia.org]
Misleading Summary (Score:5, Informative)
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Oh, I got it, a lense is reflective, but a lens is refractive.
E.
they left that part out (Score:2)
What they don't mention is that they had to fold space/time to do it.
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Cool, but... (Score:5, Interesting)
I see two disadvantages, and both of them relate to the fact that the light-gathering surface is now a donut.
The first is that the light-gathering ability is greatly reduced when compared so something else with the same width lens. On the plus side, if you are "shortening" your lens, you probably do not mind "fattening it up" in order to compensate. This also means that the lens cover on your cell phone cam will be bigger, so you have a larger area to get scratched, a larger area to wipe fingerprints off of before shooting, etc. No big whoop, but something to be aware of.
The second is that blurry objects tend to blur in the shape of the aperature. The classic picture of this is taking a picture of your sweetie standing in front of a Christmas tree covered with white lights. With a conventional lens, if the Christmas lights are blurry, they will tend to be little fuzzy circles. With the new lens, they will be little glowing fuzzy donuts. So this is probably not what you want for portrait work.
Still pretty cool, though. It will be interesting to see how this develops.
Cost benefit analysis... (Score:4, Insightful)
Silulu. Hot Polynesian Geek Chick. [scitechpulse.com]
Bullshit RTFA (Score:3, Informative)
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That only happens on non-fixed focus lenses that also have a large enough aperture.
ObSimpsons (Score:5, Funny)
Donuts... Is there anything they can't do?
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What if one where to attach two such "imagers" together? Shaping a spot into a donut, then back into a spot.
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Great (Score:5, Funny)
And don't get me started on the quality of the Britney/Paris upskirt pics....
Holy beavers, batman! (Score:2)
The posts above and below yours mention how this kind of lens will produce a halo around out of focus highlights. Come on, who wouldn't want to see a naked, wrinkled beaver with a halo? OH GOD I JUST PICTURED IT! BLEACH! I NEED BLEACH FOR MY BRAIN!
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The final product is only as good as the original source material.
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Too bad his hand would bitch at him for cheating
(Don't act like its not true O.o)
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Same tech can be used on SLRs (Score:1, Interesting)
This technology can make such lenses much smaller and lighter and potentially much cheaper, allowing serious amateurs to add extreme telephotos to their camera bag without blowing their budget or lugging around heavy equipment.
Nice? (Score:2)
Focusing (Score:1)
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Exactly how is focusing accomplished? Moving the reflector plane back and forth? Is it a conventional optic that it has fixed focal distance? Just curious.
Its basically combining the principles of a reflective telescope and a fresnel lens. In a reflective telescope, the parabolic curve of the primary mirror focuses the light onto another mirror that then reflects it through the eyepiece, which can be further focused to the proper setting by dialing it in or out. This has been compressed into this "folded optics" piece by thinning the mirrors and making the parabolic curve as a series of concentric rings much like that of a fesnel lens. By adjusting the curv
Focal lenght and out-of-focus blur(bokeh) (Score:1)
No cellphone camera has 38mm real focal lenght. They have focal length of about 5mm, which for 1/3" sensor gives same field of vision than 38mm in film camera.
This 5mm focal length lens is really not very big, but it does not have a very good aperture ( ie. area from where to gather light ).
The new "origami lens" does not make lenses smaller, but gives them bigger aperture.
There is however one very big drawbck in this design:
The "bokeh", ie form of out-of-focus softening is v
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I think the "lousy" bokeh of mirror lenses is overstated. Sure, it's not desirable for every case, but it can be quite attractive under many circumstances.
Meanwhile, the Bokeh (of out-of-focus highlights) on the cheapish 28-80 zoom on my low-end Nikon SLR is a hard-edged circle, with most of the light around
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Did you not look at the diagram? The thing blocking the aperture is the second mirror.
The "zone reflectors" are the 1st, 3rd, 5th, etc. mirrors.
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If that's not clear, it's hard to explain, but it's not important anyway; I realise now that the aperture was ring-shaped (having looked up "annular") and the whole thing was circular, with a large obstacle in the centre, making it similar to a traditional mirror lens.
Diffractive Optics (Score:1)
http://www.usa.canon.com/consumer/controller?act=M odelDetailAct&fcategoryid=154&modelid=7468 [canon.com]
http://www.usa.canon.com/consumer/controller?act=M odelDetailAct&fcategoryid=150&modelid=9996 [canon.com]
I'm an idiot (Score:1)
Telephoto Adapter (Score:4, Funny)
Sure, but at what price in quality? (Score:3, Interesting)
*IF* this can turn in f stops close to or equal to prime focus lenses or good quality zooms, for a reasonable price, then I'm interested. All those 75-300mm f5.6-f8 (or worse) lenses are useless, IMO, even with today's faster ISO chips/films. Gimme my old 180mm f2.8 any day.
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what about phase transformation? (Score:1)
what i find really interesting is how such a crystoptical system (origami lens sounds misleading and quite wrong, sorry) behaves in phase contrast transformation... if it's just mirrors of molecular thikness layers, then i would think that even aberrations can be eliminated... and this would lead not only to cheap mini-objectives but also to excellent reproducing object
Here is how to get rid of Roland Piquepaille (Score:5, Informative)
Here is one of many greasemonkey script to remove piquepaille stories
http://userscripts.org/scripts/show/5735/ [userscripts.org] [userscripts.org]
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And why aren't you using that greasemonkey script?
what about the 'liquid lens'? (Score:1)
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The liquid lens just allows refocusing by changing the shape of the lens. There's no benefit in high-aperture telephoto, which seems to be the main benefit of this new lens.
Basically, the benefit of this new technology is that if you want a longer focal length for the same aperture, you make the lens *wider* but not longer, making it suitable for telephoto or wide aperture photography where bulky lenses can't be used. i.e. compact cameras or cellphones.
Personally, I saw the drawing and recognised t
I saw such a thing from Halifax (Score:2)
With a name such as Tremblay (a very common East coast Canadian name) it's probably the same guy, maybe he moved to the US.
Origami Lens and Diffraction (Score:2, Informative)
Image quality is generally specified using a concept called Modulation Transfer Function (MTF). It is like a frequency response for lenses except the frequency is spatial in cycles per mm rather than Hertz.
Lenses with a central obstruction can have comparable MTF with respect to unobstructed lenses of the same speed, at spatial frequencies near the limit of r
advantage of reflective optics (Score:1)
Here's an intersting (to me) idea- (Score:2)
(The Piezo-electric effect, for those who came in late, is the deforming of a crystal when an electric charge is placed across it. It is used in some earpieces, some tweeters, and most buzzers used in computers. The reverse also occours: stress a crystal and a voltage is created. This is used in 'electret' microphone inserts.
Orientation (Score:1)
just what i need (Score:1)
no really, i need to take professional quality images WITH MY PHONE.
--p.
Annular lenses have terrible bokeh & low contr (Score:2)
Wound up getting an old Reflex-Nikkor through ebay back when it was still somewhat honest.
My experience was that under the best conditions (bright light, no point sources), everything looks kind of muddy.
Other times--ex. shooting geese on a pond--the points of light reflecting off of the waves show up as hundreds of little donuts.
For it's size, the lens in the diagram has a much larger central o
Old concept... (Score:2)