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A DSLR or Mirrorless camera can have interchangeable lenses that can be added to and removed from the camera. A camera body with interchangeable lenses enables the user to use a variety of inventive shooting situations.
High-sensitivity cameras are made to function in low-light settings and create images with a high dynamic range using few light photons.
big pixels are frequently used in the design of the sensor in high sensitivity cameras so that they have a big surface area to gather light.
The Global Ultra-high-sensitivity interchangeable-lens camera market accounted for $XX Billion in 2022 and is anticipated to reach $XX Billion by 2030, registering a CAGR of XX% from 2023 to 2030.
Canon Developing World-first Ultra-high-sensitivity ILC Equipped with SPAD Sensor, Supporting Precise Monitoring Through Clear Colour Image Capture of Subjects Several km Away, Even in Darkness.
The business is working on the MS-500, which will be the first ultra-high sensitivity interchangeable lens camera (ILC) in the world. It will have a 1.0 inch Single Photon Avalanche Diode (SPAD) sensor with the highest pixel count in the world—3.2 megapixels.
The camera uses broadcast lenses with great performance at telephoto-range focal lengths in addition to the unique properties of SPAD sensors to deliver excellent low-light performance. The MS-500 is anticipated to be useful for applications like high-precision monitoring because of these benefits.
High-precision monitoring systems are becoming increasingly necessary for use in locations like international borders, seaports, airports, train stations, power plants, and other critical infrastructure facilities.
These systems must be able to identify targets quickly even in challenging lighting conditions, which the human eye cannot see, and from a distance.
The MS-500, which is currently under development, has a 1.0 inch SPAD sensor that eliminates noise and enables clear, full-colour HD images even in extremely low-light conditions.
The camera is able to catch subjects with accuracy in extremely low-light situations, even at a vast distance, when used in conjunction with Canon’s wide selection of broadcast lenses, which excel at super-telephoto picture capture.
Each pixel on CMOS sensors, which are frequently found in standard current digital cameras, measures the amount of light that enters the pixel over the course of a specific period of time.
However, due to the method used to measure accumulated light, the readout of the accumulated electrical charge contains electronic noise that lowers image quality.
The final image degrades as a result, especially when utilised in low-light situations. The “photon counting” mechanism used by SPAD sensors counts the number of light rays (photons) that enter each individual pixel.
The MS-500 uses the common bayonet lens mount seen in broadcast lenses (based on BTA S-1005B specifications).
This makes it possible to utilise the camera with Canon’s wide selection of broadcast lenses, all of which have excellent optical performance. As a result, the camera can detect and record objects from a distance of many kilometres.