SPIE PHOTONICS WEST Laser Components Sill Optics Basler
connector, power over Ethernet, and an operating temperature range from 0°C to 55°C. Another demo highlight will be the 10 GigE PoE Atlas camera, featuring the fourth generation Sony Pregius S IMX530 image sensor with a resolution of 25 megapixels. In addition, Lucid will show its Helios time-of-flight camera – Helios is based on Sony’s DepthSense IMX556PLR back-illuminated ToF image sensor. Up to five modulation frequency channels mean multiple Helios cameras can operate simultaneously in the same space without interference. 
www.thinklucid.com
Critical Link Lucid Vision Labs
communicate with the camera; sensor board design files and source code; and VHDL code for the FPGA. A third evaluation kit is
in development for Canon’s 35MMFHDXS_A sensor, a 19μm, 2.76-megapixel sensor with low-light sensitivity. Availability is projected for early 2020. 
www.criticallink.com
Emberion (Finnish Pavilion, booth 5279) will introduce its visible- SWIR camera core incorporating its nanotechnology-based VGA array. The key performance differentiator of the product is a spectral range from 400nm to 2,000nm using one focal plane array. It also offers competitive sensitivity and speed. The camera core has industry-
standard interfaces for fast adoption of the sensor into customer products. It is relevant for various applications within machine vision and night vision, as well as hyperspectral imaging. Emberion designs and
produces high-performance infrared imagers based on nanomaterials and in-house designed CMOS integrated circuits. The firm’s primary products are infrared sensors
www.imveurope.com | @imveurope
and camera cores for visible- SWIR and MWIR. 
www.emberion.com
A terahertz sensor operating over a frequency range between 500GHz and 2,500GHz will be shown by the Ferdinand-Braun- Institut (booth 4545). The sensor offers sensitivity of NEP 50pW/ Hz0.5
along with a fast response
time. It is suited for imaging systems used for quality control in industrial applications, and can also be integrated into medical equipment, for example for diabetes diagnostics and spectroscopy. The terahertz camera sensor is based on the institute’s in-house GaN-HEMT MMIC process. On the same booth, the
Fraunhofer Heinrich-Hertz- Institut will demonstrate its continuous-wave terahertz system, T-Sweeper. The system provides a measurement rate of up to 60 points per second, which makes the T-Sweeper a cost-efficient alternative to pulsed terahertz systems. 
www.fbh-berlin.com 
www.hhi.de
Laser Components (booth 449) will be displaying the Albalux
FM white light laser module. The fibre-guided illumination source provides a continuous-wave luminous flux of more than 150 lumens. The light is suitable for endoscopy, surgical headlamps, and 3D image processing. In addition to brightness, the module gives precise beam guidance, sharp beam edges, and has low power consumption. The housing contains specially developed electronics for safe control of the light source. Albalux FM is based on laser
light technology from SLD Laser. Two semi-polar blue GaN laser diodes (450nm) illuminate a phosphorus chip, producing a brilliant, incoherent white light that is ten times brighter than white LEDs. The Albalux FM with fibre output is the first model in a range of products. 
www.laser-components.com
Lucid Vision Labs (booth 3164) will showcase its Triton 2k line scan camera featuring the 2K AMS Dragster DR-2k-7 monochrome line scan sensor. The sensor has a 7μm pixel size, a resolution of 2,048 x 1, and a line rate of 60kHz. Additional features include: IP67 protection, a robust M12 Ethernet GPIO
Raptor Photonics (booth 2343) will exhibit its latest Ninox 640 visible-SWIR camera, which has 18 electrons readout noise combined with a low dark current reading. The camera has intrascene dynamic range of 72dB in low gain, enabling simultaneous capture of bright and dark portions of a scene. Available with a 14-bit Camera Link output, the Ninox 640 will run from 10Hz to 120Hz; automated gain control and non-uniform correction algorithms produce high-quality images. The Ninox 640 is cooled to -15°C to reduce dark current for longer exposures. Both TEC and water-cooled options are available. 
www.raptorphotonics.com
Sill Optics (booth 1266) will present telecentric lenses for machine vision. In 2019, Sill started producing lenses for the waveband 900nm to 1,700nm, including its first telecentric SWIR lens. The company has extended this product range with an additional telecentric and a standard SWIR lens for a sensor size up to 25.6mm and a pixel size down to 10µm. Imaging technology now
requires optics for larger sensors and smaller pixel sizes. Sill launched telecentric lenses for an image diagonal of up to 24mm and pixel sizes down to 3.45µm and 2.76µm, suitable for new Sony IMX sensors with 12- to 20-megapixel resolution. Furthermore, Sill Optics has
reworked its bi-telecentric lens portfolio for line sensors and now offers lenses for line scan and area scan imaging with an extended image diagonal of up to 82mm and 5µm pixels. 
www.silloptics.de
DECEMBER 2019/JANUARY 2020 IMAGING AND MACHINE VISION EUROPE 31
            
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