Over a year ago, a new camera stunned the world with its ability to snap 10 trillion frames per second. That speed made it possible to watch light move in slow motion. But for all its speed, the ...
The setup utilizes a machine learning-based algorithm that was trained on both depth-sensing and color images of the same opaque objects. By having compared a number of the two types of images, that ...
(Nanowerk News) Kitchen robots are a popular vision of the future, but if a robot of today tries to grasp a kitchen staple such as a clear measuring cup or a shiny knife, it likely won't be able to.
Prefer Newsweek on Google to see more of our trusted coverage when you search. New camera technology that takes up to 1 trillion frames per second is so advanced it can take images of transparent ...
A little over a year ago, Caltech's Lihong Wang developed the world's fastest camera, a device capable of taking 10 trillion pictures per second. It is so fast that it can even capture light traveling ...
Transparent visuals are significant in contemporary digital design and visual communication. Designers often use them to isolate subjects from visual distractions. This clean format is suitable for ...
You might not see most objects in near-total darkness, but AI can. MIT scientists have developed a technique that uses a deep neural network to spot objects in extremely low light. The team trained ...
A transparent object illuminated by an electromagnetic field generates a scattering pattern that carries specific information about its internal structure. Inferring this information from measurements ...
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