May 3, 2017 - 13:06 AMT
Swedish scientists create world's fastest camera

Those high-speed cameras that capture over million or even over a billion frames per second have got nothing on Lund University's creation. The Swedish University's invention can film at a rate equivalent to five trillion images per second -- that's enough to capture anything that happens within 0.2 trillionths of a second, Engadget says.

This refers to events much faster than anything a GoPro can capture, particularly natural processes and reactions in chemistry, physics and biology.

Take, for instance, the below video showing light passing through a sheet of paper:

In real life, that only takes about a trillionth of a second, but the camera was able to film a three-second video of the event. So, how does Lund's camera do it? It uses an innovative algorithm that exposes chemical reactions and biological processes to laser flashes instead of light. The objects reflected by each pulse are merged into one picture, though they can subsequently be separated to show how the process occurs, such as in the video above.

You don't need a camera like this to capture even the fastest animal alive on film; the team says it's most useful for capturing "explosions, plasma flashes, turbulent combustion, brain activity in animals and chemical reactions."

Team leader Elias Kristensson and his partner Andreas Ehn also conduct combustion research involving high-speed molecular processes.

Photo. Lund University/Kennet Ruona