The ZED 3D camera is a light weight, low
cost, high quality 3D camera with a variety of uses (Credit: Stereolabs)
Image Gallery (4 images)
San Francisco-based Stereolabs has
launched a new 3D camera that promises to deliver high quality 3D image capture
at a less than astronomical price. The compact, lightweight ZED 3D vision sensor
can measure distances out to 20 meters (65 feet) and work indoors and out,
making it a strong candidate for applications such as large-scale architectural
scanning and obstacle detection for self-driving cars and unmanned
drones.
Stereo cameras are passive devices that
work by comparing two images taken by cameras several inches apart. Computer
software looks at the distance in pixels between similar features in each image
and use that to estimate the depth or distance from the camera to objects in the
scene. These algorithms require precise calibration of the cameras in order to
work.
Stereolabs was founded by Cecile
Schmollgruber, Edwin Azzam and Olivier Braun back in 2010. Their original
customers were movie studios doing special effects. Stereolabs would come in and
capture a movie set in 3D using scanners and 3D cameras so that the computer
animators could come in later and add the dinosaurs, rampaging green
superheroes, or legions of zombies to the scene. This experience led them to
conclude that there was a need in the market for good quality stereo cameras at
a reasonable price – there are some low cost 3D sensors with poor sensors, and
some high end, expensive laboratory cameras, but nothing at a reasonable price
with good quality optics and video.
As a result Stereolabs spent years
developing its 3D camera software, and the past 12 months working on the ZED
hardware.
Based-on smart phone camera technology, the
ZED camera was designed to be small, lightweight, low cost, and still have high
quality output. The two cameras each have 4,416 x 1,242 pixel sensors in a 16 x
9 wide screen format. The optics allow 110 degrees field of view. The cameras
are spaced 120mm (4.7 inches) apart, which with the dense pixel video gives
usable stereo depth information from 1.5 to 20 m (5-65 ft). The unit itself
measures 175 x 30 x 33 mm (6.89 x 1.18 x 1.3’’) and weighs 159 g (0.35
lb).
Gizmag talked to Cecile Schmollgruber, the
CEO of Stereolabs, who explained that all of the calibration for the ZED camera
is done within the device, and it automatically calibrates itself for quality
depth sensing.
The ZED camera does not do all of the work
by itself, though. The 3D camera sends side-by-side video images to a host
computer that processes the data. For full capability, Stereolabs recommends
having a CUDA-capable computer with an NVIDA graphics card.
Specifically, Schmollgruber recommends the
NVIDIA Jetson
TK1 embedded processing board, a single-board
computer with a small form factor and a CPU-GPU combined chip. This board would
allow 3D stereo processing on vehicles and other mobile applications of the ZED
camera.
The potential applications for the ZED
camera are numerous. It can be a long range 3D sensor for unmanned vehicles,
self driving cars or small-scale mobile robots, it can capture 3D scenes and
buildings to incorporate into computer animation and rendering, and collect
detailed images of objects in three dimensions so they can be replicated with a
3D printer. It could also be part of a 3D video conferencing system where the
participants wear HMD (Head Mounted Displays) like the Oculus Rift, or used for
various types of recognition and tracking systems or tasks such as counting
crowds at football stadiums.
The ZED camera is now available for US$449,
with delivery times of two to three weeks expected.
Source: Stereolabs via 3D Printing Industry
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segunda-feira, 1 de junho de 2015
Stereolabs' ZED camera delivers long range 3D vision
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