Paper
1 January 1992 High-speed electronic memory video recording techniques
Don L. Thomas
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Video motion analysis has entered a new era with the introduction of the Kodak EKTAPRO EM Motion Analyzer, Model 1012, a high-speed solid-state video recording system. No longer confined to the limitations of film or tape for high-speed image acquisition, the electronic memory solid-state recorder offers new recording schemes never before possible. The EKTAPRO EM Motion Analyzer can be manually controlled by way of the keypad, or set into trigger dependent modes to allow the actual application to control the recording. Trigger parameters include switch closure, sound, temperature, change in illumination, or a change in voltage. By writing over old frames with new, it is possible to have the high-speed video system in a continuous record mode and ready to capture an intermittent or uncontrolled event without the constraints of recorders that are dependent on consumable media. This paper will focus on innovative recording techniques (Record, Record-Stop, Record-Trigger, Record-On- Command, Burst-Record-On-Command, and External Sync) and how the world of high-speed electronic image recording vastly differs from conventional high-speed tape and film methods.
© (1992) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Don L. Thomas "High-speed electronic memory video recording techniques", Proc. SPIE 1539, Ultrahigh- and High-Speed Photography, Videography, and Photonics '91, (1 January 1992); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.50542
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KEYWORDS
Motion analysis

Imaging systems

Video

Signal processing

Image processing

Solid state electronics

High speed photography

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