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World's biggest CMOS sensor could help doctors detect and treat cancer
5/6/2011


Move over, Canon, because scientists at the health center of Lincoln have just seized the crown for world's biggest CMOS image sensor with their new Dynamic range malleable for Medical Imaging computers microchip -- or 'DyNAMITe,' for short. Measuring a hefty 12.8 square cm (or about five square inches), DyNAMITe is roughly 200 times bigger than the chips you'd find in most PCs, making it the largest imager ever made on a wafer of standard, eight-inch diameter. This extra girth allows the active pixel sensor to capture images in high detail, with a 100-micrometer pitch boasting 1280 x 1280p aligned next to a 50-micron layer, carrying 2560 x 2560p. DyNAMITe can also run at up to 90fps and stomach high levels of shoot for several years, making it ideal for medical imaging, including radiotherapy and mammography. Researchers say these enhanced images could help doctors detect cancer in its earliest phases, while allowing them to monitor radiotherapy treatments more closely. No word on when we should expect to see DyNAMITe pop up in hospitals (or a Hasselblad back), but physicists at the precedent of Cancer probing and Royal Marsden mash are busy looking for other, potentially life-saving applications. Full PR after the break.

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World's biggest CMOS sensor could help doctors detect and treat cancer first appeared on Engadget on Fri, 06 May 2011 09:26:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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