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Vision Research, the company behind the Phantom series of high-speed cameras, has announced the Phantom TMX 7510 and 6410 which are its first to utilize backside-illuminated sensors. The TMX 7510’s 75-gigapixel throughput can provide an incredible 1,750,000 frames per second.
The TMX 7510 achieves 76,000 frames per second at full 1-Megapixel resolution of 1280 x 800, over 300,000 frames per second at 1280 x 192 resolution, and over 770,000 frames per second at smaller resolutions — But it gets even faster.
“With the export-controlled FAST option, TMX 7510 reaches a blistering 1.75 Million frames per second and 95 nanosecond minimum exposure time, eliminating motion blur,” the company says. “This enables precise motion analysis for extremely fast applications.”
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To work at these high frame rates, the cameras are extremely light-sensitive with a native ISO of 40,000 for monochrome sensors and 12,500 for color sensors. The backside-illuminated (BSI) nature of the sensor allows for greater sensitivity by placing the photodiode closer to the source, which allows for a smaller pixel size of 18.5 microns that Vision Research says allows for more imaging definition.
The TMX 7510 can reach that 1.75 million frames per second mark at a resolution of 1280 x 32. Below is a full chart of performance.
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As seen above, the camera can capture in “standard” or “binned” modes. The TMX Series offers 2 x 2 binning for high frame rates to provide users field-of-view flexibility. For example, the TMX 7510 can achieve over 617,000 frames per second at a resolution of 1280 x 94, or a resolution of 640 x 192 in binned mode.
Below are a few examples of what is visible at these incredibly fast frame rates:
The TMX 6410 has the same BSI sensor found on the 7510 and has similar features but at a lower maximum framerate. While the TMX 7510 can capture 76,000 frames per second at its 1 MP resolution, the 6410 can do the same resolution at 66,000 frames per second. Additionally, the TMX 6410 has a maximum framerate of 1,500,000 per second compared to the 7510’s 1,750,000 per second.
The standard lens mount for both of the TMX-series cameras is Nikon F-Mount and includes aperture support for Nikon G lenses, but Canon EF, C-mount, and M42-mount options are also available. No pricing or date of availability for either camera was mentioned at the time of publication.
(via DPReview)
Author: Jaron Schneider
Source: Petapixel