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Researchers are developing a new technology that makes your phone see the world in 3D

 A group of Stanford University experimenters has developed a new technology that helps make smartphone camera detectors see the world in 3D.


Oktan Atalar, a experimenter in the Department of Electrical Engineering at Stanford University, refocused out that the new technology relies on the use of advanced 2D imaging detectors in smartphone cameras to be suitable to snap 3D footage.

The exploration platoon explained that during their study of different ways to measure the confines of effects to make 3D models, they came up with numerous ways, similar as using a light source and a detector to measure the change in illumination, so that the detector opens and closes the light millions of times per second, and therefore can calculate the confines of the camera from the girding objects Still, they discovered that this system needed an enormous power source, making it an impracticable result.


Thus, the experimenters decided to develop their own system, which is grounded on the miracle of aural resonance, which is grounded on erecting a detector to measure the degree of sound change, made of a transparent lithium niobate material, due to its distinctive electrical, aural and optic parcels, and the detector will be covered with two transparent electrodes.

The Stanford exploration platoon indicated that the new detector design facilitates its operation in colorful smart bias similar as mobile phones, professional digital cameras and drones.


To clarify the effectiveness of their new detector, the experimenters touched on Apple's use of the LiDAR optic radar detector in its rearmost iPhone 13 Pro and iPhone 13 Pro Max phones, which helps druggies capture high- resolution vids and prints in delicate and night- light conditions, noting that their new detector offers performance similar to Apple detector but at a lower cost, and the possibility of operation in a wide range of smart phones.

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