I've seen a video in just the last week of some scientists using a couple of Canon DSLRs, plus some mirrors, and I forgot what else to slow down light like those sparks above and the ol bullet through the apple trick. They were actually able to capture something like 1/1,000,000,000,000(1 trillionth) of a second. Pretty sick. Saw it on Engadget.com. It was a time lapse of a beam of light as it approached and hit an object from across a lab testing bench.
@Bosingr To be more precise, it captures at a trillion fps. It was an MIT team that did that.
Bosingr 2 months ago
I've seen a video in just the last week of some scientists using a couple of Canon DSLRs, plus some mirrors, and I forgot what else to slow down light like those sparks above and the ol bullet through the apple trick. They were actually able to capture something like 1/1,000,000,000,000(1 trillionth) of a second. Pretty sick. Saw it on Engadget.com. It was a time lapse of a beam of light as it approached and hit an object from across a lab testing bench.
Bosingr 2 months ago
@Bosingr you could slow it down to 24 fps to render unblurred motion.
mizhoDA 2 months ago
The sparks got boring after 10-15 seconds max. What else can it do @ 300 fps?
Bosingr 5 months ago