A Mega-FPS low light camera
Abstract
From biology and astronomy to quantum optics, there is a critical need for high frame rate, high quantum efficiency imaging. In practice, most cameras only satisfy one of these requirements. Here we introduce interlaced fast kinetics imaging, a technique that allows burst video acquisition at frame rates up to 3.33 Mfps using a commercial EMCCD camera with single-photon sensitivity. This approach leverages EMCCD's intrinsic fast row transfer dynamics by introducing a tilted lens array into the imaging path, creating a spatially distributed grid of exposed pixels, each aligned to its own column of the sensor. The remaining unexposed pixels serve as in-situ storage registers, allowing subsequent frames to be captured after just one row shift operation. Our interlaced fast kinetics camera maintains 50% contrast for square wave intensity modulation frequencies up to 1.61 MHz. We provide benchmarks of the video performance by capturing two dimensional videos of spatially evolving patterns that repeat every 2s, with spatial resolution of 1115 pixels. Our approach is compatible with commercial EMCCDs and opens a new route to ultra-fast imaging at single-photon sensitivity with applications from fast fluorescence imaging to photon correlation measurement.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2502.18716,
title = {A Mega-FPS low light camera},
author = {Bowen Li and Lukas Palm and Marius Jürgensen and Yiming Cady Feng and Markus Greiner and Jon Simon},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2502.18716},
year = {2025}
}
Comments
Updated funding information. 16 pages, 11 figures