New cameras can turn night into day

Dutch researchers have developed revolutionary vision equipment that makes video imaging at night time as clear and as in the day.

Existing night-vision cameras have various limitations

According to the British weekly New Scientist on Wednesday, the system was devised for the Dutch military and uses a computer to impose colour on an image.

 

The technology replaces the fuzzy grey or green monochrome images of conventional night-vision goggles, it reports in next Saturday’s issue.

  

Night-vision cameras either amplify available light or use infrared sensors to map the heat radiation that emanates from objects.

  

The new gadget improves on this by “sampling” colour daytime images in the landscapes in which the system is expected to be used.

  

It then selects random pixels to obtain a sample of the range of colours in a typical environment – browns for tree trunks, greens for grass, vegetation and tree canopies, blues for the sky.

 

Colours matched

 

The system matches these colours to equivalent monochrome shades – for example, a light grey is matched to a shade of blue for the sky, a dark brown is matched to tree trunks.

  

Many night-vision cameras useinfrared sensors
Many night-vision cameras useinfrared sensors

Many night-vision cameras use
infrared sensors

Then, when the system is used at night to view a target scene, the mapping is reversed, so that monochrome pixels are replaced with the closest colour match.

  

The equipment has already been tested on a dozen volunteers, who say it has dramatically improved their ability to spot obstacles and terrain in the dark.

  

The next step is to develop a prototype for night-time, low-flying helicopter manoeuvres.

Source: AFP

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