High-fidelity feline: Samsung is after the internet's collective heart with collosal 200MP cat photo

High-fidelity feline: Samsung is after the internet's collective heart with collosal 200MP cat photo
ÔÎÒÎ: dpreview.com

Last September, Samsung announced the ISOCELL HP1 mobile image sensor for smartphone cameras. Its resolution sets the ISOCELL HP1 apart from Samsung's other impressive image sensors. The sensor has a whopping 200MP resolution, the highest in a smartphone.

Samsung's current flagship smartphones include a 100MP image sensor, which is still extremely high for a smartphone and much higher than the 12MP sensors found in Apple's popular iPhone lineup.

To show off its ISOCELL HP1 image sensor, Samsung has printed a massive 616 square meter (2,021 square feet) photograph. The image is 28m wide and 22m high, which is about one a half times the size of a basketball court.

'I have always wondered just how big you could go when it comes to printing out a 200MP image,' said Minhyuk Lee, an engineer from the Sensor Solutions Team at Samsung's System LSI Business. 'As exciting as it was, the challenge was a demanding one, as this was our first time showcasing the quality of an image sensor that has yet to be adopted in smartphones. '

The 200MP image sensor is still under development and hasn't found its way into Samsung's consumer products. The team chose to take a picture of a cat because the team wanted to test the image sensor with a moving subject, and they decided that a cat would allow them to show off a lot of detail. Plus, it's a 'popular photography subject. ' A win all around.

The photo was captured using a test board. Once the composition was lined up, engineers modified settings for focus and exposure and then captured a series of photos. Photographer Hyunjoong Kim said, 'I couldn't believe my eyes when I saw the raw image enlarged to 100%. I was truly astonished by the degree of detail. In that moment, I knew any prejudices I had previously had regarding smartphone photography had been proven wrong. '

The 200MP image sensor will offer benefits beyond pure resolution. By capturing an image with so many pixels, users have a lot of flexibility for cropping and digital zoom without sacrificing image quality. 200MP is plenty for versatile 8K video recording too, of course.

The ISOCELL HP1 can record full-resolution 16,384 x 12,288 images at up to 7. 5 frames per second. If you require more speed, the sensor can shoot 50MP images at up to 30fps and 12. 5MP images at 120fps. The image sensor includes Samsung's proprietary ChameleonCell technology that allows for different pixel binning approaches, including 4-to-1 and 16-to-1, for improved low-light performance at the expense of megapixels. In our original coverage, we wrote, 'The HP1 sensor uses a color filter array in which each of the primary colors covers a 4 x 4 group of photodiodes (effectively a 12MP Bayer pattern). The camera then interpolates the missing R, G or B values within these 4x4 regions, in its high-res mode, using what Samsung calls its 're-mosaicing' algorithm. This algorithm has been trained using machine learning to produce more plausible results than simple mathematical interpolation. '

The ISOCELL HP1 may soon be finding its way into smartphones. Last week, Motorola teased a new smartphone with a 200MP camera. while details are scarce ahead of a July announcement, Motorola will likely adopt the ISOCELL HP1 for its 200MP smartphone. Click here for more information on the upcoming Motorola smartphone and Samsung's 200MP image sensor.

.

image sensor samsung 200mp smartphone

2022-6-3 19:17

image sensor → Ðåçóëüòàòîâ: 64 / image sensor - ôîòî


Sony Developed Two New Sensors: A 3-Layer Organic Chip and the ‘World’s First’ All-PDAF Sensor

Sony is working hard to keep its image sensor supremacy. The company is planning to show off two new image sensors at the 2019 International Electronic Devices Meeting (IEDM) that should have photographers excited: a 3-layer organic image sensor that will require no demosaicing, and “the world’s first all PDAF CMOS image sensor.” According to […] petapixel.com »

2019-10-11 17:57

Ôîòî: dpreview.com

A sample image from Samsung's 64MP Quad-Bayer sensor has appeared online

In May, Samsung launched its 64MP Quad-Bayer image sensor for use in smartphone cameras. Like the 48MP Sony equivalent that's already inside several current flagship devices, the Isocell Bright GW1 is designed to produce full-resolution output in good light conditions and use its Quad-Bayer technology to combine four pixels into one, for better detail, lower noise levels and increased dynamic range, in more challenging circumstances. dpreview.com »

2019-06-24 17:51

Press text: Sony Develops a Stacked CMOS Global Shutter Image Sensor

Sony announced a new Global Shutter Image Sensor. I am wondering when we will see this one on APS-C and FF cameras! Hope soon! Press text: Sony Develops a Stacked CMOS Image Sensor Technology Using Sony’s Proprietary Global Shutter Function with Back-Illuminated Pixel Structure to Deliver Both High Imaging Performance and Miniaturization Improves Productivity of […] The post Press text: Sony Develops a Stacked CMOS Global Shutter Image Sensor appeared first on sonyalpharumors. sonyalpharumors.com »

2019-03-18 19:50

Ôîòî: digitalrev.com

What is a Curved Sensor?

How would like a camera that is smaller than your current D-SLR and yet can shoot in low-light conditions, producing images that are sharper than you're used to? That’s the promise of curved sensor technology, and it’s about to hit commercial cameras. digitalrev.com »

2017-07-28 03:00

Ôîòî: dpreview.com

Demand for CMOS image sensors projected to increase

According to industry publication DigiTimes, we should expect demand for CMOS image sensors, particularly high-end units, to increase in the short and medium term. This is mainly due to the increased popularity of dual-camera modules in high-end smartphones, such as the Apple iPhone 7 Plus, LG G5 or Huawei P9, and growing demand for imaging applications in the automotive and security industries. dpreview.com »

2017-01-18 21:29