09-03-2007 10:56 AM
09-03-2007 03:14 PM
09-03-2007 05:34 PM
I agree with Guenter..
Some cameras have a sample rate of 30Hz, so if the LED blinks at a higher rate, you won't detect it. Furthermore, depending on your sight threshold, you may not see a flickering light at rates higher than 30Hz (well... usually ~40Hz, but I read about people with lower threshold).
09-06-2007 09:46 AM
09-06-2007 10:13 AM
Not that it helps with the original question but...
Doesn't Nyquist say that a camara operating at 30 Hz can only measure blink rates of 15Hz or below?
Ben
09-06-2007 10:23 AM
Arguing with myself now
I beleive that is true only if the Led intensity is being modualted with a sine wave of 15 Hz. If the Led is being turned on and off using a square wave, then the highest freq component of the intensity modulation signal must be 15 Hz or less.
Ben
09-06-2007 12:03 PM - edited 09-06-2007 12:03 PM
@Ben wrote:
Doesn't Nyquist say that a camara operating at 30 Hz can only measure blink rates of 15Hz or below?
That's usually when you want to sample an analog signal reliably, it order to reproduce it (evaluate freq, etc) later on...
In this case, you would have two "digital" signals, so the camera should be able to "see" blinking up to 30 Hz. (Not taking into account transition time etc.. , in an ideal (but not real) world).
We're starting to sound too much like engineers...
In laymen's terms.. yeah.. it should see most blinks.. 😄 😄
Message Edited by JoeLabView on 09-06-2007 01:05 PM
09-06-2007 12:11 PM
Something seems wrong ther Ray.
What if both the camera and led were running at exactly 30 Hz BUT the led was always on while the image was not being acquired and off while its was.
It would never see the LED on.
If it was shifted another 180 degrees, it would look like it was always on.
Ben
09-06-2007 12:23 PM - edited 09-06-2007 12:23 PM
Message Edited by johnsold on 09-06-2007 01:24 PM
09-06-2007 12:28 PM - edited 09-06-2007 12:28 PM
@harjeemann wrote:
i am using labview to calculate the frame rate of my camera for this i am having a led and camera facing to this led and i increse the frequency of this led and at 30 hz the led seems not to be blinking.
OOPs!! My mistake..
Yes!! If you want to detect "blinking", then it's 1/2, so 15Hz max....
For some reason, in my mind was the ability to "see" the LED being ON..
Thanks for the explanation Lynn.. You're completely right...
I'm going away to get some coffee.. 🙂 Thanks for keeping my brain active, guys! 🙂
😄
--- I'm going insane, aren't I?? 😞 ---
Message Edited by JoeLabView on 09-06-2007 01:31 PM