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615 points thunderbong | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.21s | source
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estimator7292 ◴[] No.45651413[source]
Tl:dw for how this works:

He scans one line at a time with a mirror into a photomultiplier tube which can detect single photon events. This is captured continually at 2MSample/s (2 billion times per second: 2B FPS) with an oscilloscope and a clever hack.

The laser is actually pulsing at 30KHz, and the oscilloscope capture is synchronized to the laser pulse.

So we consider each 30KHz pulse a single event in a single pixel (even though the mirror is rotating continuously). So he runs the experiment 30,000 times per second, each one recording a single pixel at 2B FPS for a few microseconds. Each pixel-sized video is then tiled into a cohesive image

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SCLeo ◴[] No.45651508[source]
Thanks for the explanation. Honestly, your explanation is better than the entire video. - I watched it in full and got really confused. I completely missed the part where he said the light is pulsing at 30kHZ and was really puzzled at how he is able to move the mirror so fast to cover the entire scene.
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1. alanh ◴[] No.45657058[source]
Huh. I watched a lot, but not all, of the video, and I thought he made it clear early on that he was stitching together 1px videos & repeating the event for each pixel (about a million times for that 720p result)