Archives for October 2019

Sony Unveils 6 Stacked Global Shutter Sensors

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Sony announces the forthcoming release of six new types of stacked CMOS sensors with a BSI global shutter pixel for industrial applications. They will employ Sony’s Pregius S — stacked global shutter technology, first announced in March 2019.

Until now, increasing the number of pixels has resulted in the downside of increased chip and camera size. However, if the pixel size is reduced to prevent increasing the camera size, then the light-accumulating area per pixel will correspondingly decrease, resulting in a drop in the sensitivity and saturation signal level. This results in image quality degradation, in turn leading to degradation in recognition and detection performance.

The proprietary BSI pixel allows for a compact size of only 2.74µm square, which is about 63% of the conventional Sony pixel area, but still maintaining pixel characteristics such as sensitivity and saturation signal level. While using the same optical system as previous models, the number of pixels has been increased and the package size (area) has been reduced to about 91%.

The new products achieve a readout frame rate approximately 2.4 times the speed of conventional Sony image sensors thanks to the highly flexible wiring layout of the BSI pixel structure, and the use of the Scalable Low Voltage Signaling with Embedded Clock (SLVS-EC) high-speed interface standard developed by Sony. Further, the stacked structure allows for embedding various signal processing circuits such as HDR processing circuit that can prevent distortion in moving objects, thereby enabling myriad functions for various machine vision applications in a package more compact than conventional image sensors.

The Pregius S lineup includes the high-speed IMX530/531/532 models for high-end cameras using high-speed bandwidth, in addition to the standard IMX540/541/542 models that support 5Gbps supplementing the expansion in the application of USB 3.0 and 5GigE.

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Canon requests removal of toner cartridges offered by Zhong shan shi cai pin dian zi you xian gong si via Amazon

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Canon requests removal of toner cartridges offered by Chengdu yuehongshun shangmao youxian gongsi via Amazon

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Sony and Omnivision See Strong Orders from Huawei

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Digitimes reports that Sony and OmniVision have both enjoyed robust demand for multi-camera smartphones from Huawei despite the US trade sanctions.

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Canon requests removal of toner cartridges offered by Maria Carmen García Fornet from Amazon.es

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Canon requests removal of toner cartridges offered by VENUE DESIGN & CONSULTING SRL-D via Amazon

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Canon files new toner cartridge-related patent infringement lawsuit in U.S.

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LiDAR News: Blickfeld, Outsight, Cepton, Ouster, 1550nm Laser Safety

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Blickfeld presents is long range Cube LiDAR family featuring the range up to 250m (with 80% subject reflectivity, no sunlight illumination specified):


Outsight publishes its presentation on France24 International channel:



BusinessWire: Cepton announces Vista-X120 long range LiDAR. It's said to offer a 120° horizontal FOV, 0.15° angular resolution, and a maximum detection range of up to 200 meters at 10% reflectivity. Based on Cepton’s patented Micro Motion Technology (MMT), the frictionless beam-steering architecture is claimed to make Vista-X120 highly rugged and durable.


BusinessWire: Ouster LiDAR is going to be used by NVIDIA in its self-driving DRIVE AGX platform.

Commercial autonomous vehicles have to withstand some of the world’s most demanding environments,” said Ouster CEO Angus Pacala. “The OS2’s reliability and resolution make it the clear choice for NVIDIA’s OEM partners that require the highest level of dependability.

For autonomous driving systems, Ouster’s structured lidar data can increase input processing speeds by up to 100-times over traditional unstructured lidar data when using vector processors like NVIDIA GPUs. This enables faster object recognition and lower power requirements for the autonomous driving system.

Engadget: Ouster also proud of being able to catch on LiDAR the blackest colored car - BMW X6 SUV Vantablack absorbing 99% of light:



LaserFocus questions the common opinion that 1550nm wavelength is much safer than 905nm:

"There has been a claim that one person suffered a corneal burn from a 1550-nm laser that had been assessed as "eye safe at the exit aperture," but details remain private. Based on what little information is available, safety consultant and optical radiation biophysicist Bruce Struck says, "It seems possible but would have required an unusual viewing situation." Nonetheless, he says "we need thoughtful and comprehensive measurements."

A potential long-term danger is failure to filter out short-wavelength infrared pump light, a problem the National Institute of Standards and Technology found was common several years ago in green laser pointers. Fiber-laser lidars are pumped by diode lasers emitting in the 900 nm band, which can pose a retinal risk. Careful design and manufacturing can prevent hazardous leaks, but the NIST study shows that some makers of inexpensive lasers cut corners.

Early developers disclosed few details about their 1550-nm lidars, so many observers assumed they used diode lasers. However, fiber lasers offer better beam quality and have other performance advantages. "As far as we know, everyone using 1550 nm for automotive lidar is using some form of fiber amplification" pumped at wavelengths below one micrometer, says Matthew Weed, director of technology strategy for Luminar Technologies (Orlando, FL). Luminar's fiber lidars amplify seed pulses from diode lasers.
"

The pumping laser leakage might be yet another possible explanation the image sensor damage case at CES.

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Sony New Web Site, Pregius S Technology

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Sony has updated its semiconductor products web site with more modern look and, supposedly, better navigation. The new site features few video about Sony stacked global shutter technology:

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Canon announces corporate name change of Océ to Canon Production Printing

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