Although our iPhone cameras are at the cutting edge of clarity and quality, they can only capture light from the visible range of the spectrum. InfiRay attempts to unlock more from your iPhone with ...
Cambridge, Massachusetts – Axiom Optics, a leading North American distributor of high-end optical instrumentation, is excited to announce its expanded range of high-quality infrared cameras by top ...
August 7, 2020, Saitama, Japan - Tamron Co., Ltd. (President & CEO: Shiro Ajisaka; Headquarters: Saitama City, Japan), a leading manufacturer of optics for diverse applications, announces the market ...
Weighing only 4 lbs., Spynel-M is a high-resolution panoramic infrared thermal camera that continuously captures full 360-degree infrared images every second. With the built-in Cyclope software that ...
The Thermal Master P2 is a tiny yet powerful thermal imaging camera designed exclusively for Android devices. Weighing just 10g, it packs a 256×192 IR resolution, 15X zoom, and a temperature range of ...
The OSXL-E series feature on-board visual camera, Wi-Fi connectivity, scalable P-i-P (Picture in Picture), thermal fusion and a bright LED light. This CE compliant product stores more than 1000 JPEG ...
The article "Night Vision or Thermal: What’s Better for Your SWAT Operation?" examines the question at hand and steps through the darkness to offer up some insight ...
Inspired by the infrared sensory organs of snakes, which allow them to detect prey in complete darkness, researchers at UNIST have harnessed artificial intelligence (AI) to develop a sensor material ...
No doubt you’ve heard of Seek Thermal by now. They made waves when the Seek Thermal Compact Camera launched a few months ago, and while we got to see it for ourselves at IFA 2015 in Berlin back in ...
Last year, Senior Editor Lee Hutchinson played with the FLIR One, a $349 iPhone case that had two embedded cameras to bring you all the power of Predator in John McTiernan’s 1987 film Predator. That ...
Photography is great, but sometimes it can get boring just reusing the same wavelengths over and over again. There are other options, though and when [Malcolm Wilson] decided he wanted to explore them ...