Paper
1 February 1985 Some Mirror Scanning Schemes Of High-Speed Cameras With Optical-Mechanical Commutation Of The Image
A. V. Belinskiy, A. S. Dubovik
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 0491, 16th Intl Congress on High Speed Photography and Photonics; (1985) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.967947
Event: 16th International Congress on High Speed Photography and Photonics, 1984, Strasbourg, France
Abstract
Overwhelming majority of high-speed cameras with optical-mechanical commutation (i.e., rotating mirror framing cameras) has a cylindrical film track' and it results, to a considerable degree, in their enlarged overall dimensions and weight. A rare exception is the high-speed camera discribed in report2 when they managed to design a flat film track by adding a flat mirror to each commutating lens (i.e., framing lens) but the construction became more complex. Thus 48 flat mirrors should be inserted into the optical path at 48 frames being recorded. Nevertheless camerae is rather compact and provided with cassettes of "dry" developing that considerably raises photoresearch work rate. The aim of the paper is to introduce two other systems of mirror scanning, which also allow to get the flat film.
© (1985) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
A. V. Belinskiy and A. S. Dubovik "Some Mirror Scanning Schemes Of High-Speed Cameras With Optical-Mechanical Commutation Of The Image", Proc. SPIE 0491, 16th Intl Congress on High Speed Photography and Photonics, (1 February 1985); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.967947
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KEYWORDS
Mirrors

Waveguides

Cameras

Objectives

Fiber optics

High speed cameras

Imaging systems

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