Scientists have created a blazing-fast scientific camera that shoots images at an encoding rate of 156.3 terahertz (THz) to individual pixels — equivalent to 156.3 trillion frames per second. Dubbed SCARF (swept-coded aperture real-time femtophotography), the research-grade camera could lead to breakthroughs in fields studying micro-events that come and go too quickly for today’s most expensive scientific sensors.
SCARF has successfully captured ultrafast events like absorption in a semiconductor and the demagnetization of a metal alloy. The research could open new frontiers in areas as diverse as shock wave mechanics or developing more effective medicine.
I think you’re off by a few orders of magnitude. It’d be 82,000 years, not 82 years.
156T / 60hz = 2.6T seconds
2.6T seconds = ~82500 years
That’s what the 81+ means
Does that fall under “technically correct”?
Off by 81k years, sounds good to me