



Date:04/07/16
If you've ever wanted to take photographs of the inside of your spleen, you may be in luck. Scientists at the University of Stuttgart in Germany have created a camera so tiny it can be injected into your body through a syringe.
Using something called a "femtosecond direct laser writing system," they 3D printed a three-part lens, no bigger than a grain of salt, onto the end of a fiber optic cable the width of two human hairs. The researchers say the device could be injected into previously difficult areas to photograph such as inside an organ--even the brain--and pave the way for next-generation endoscopes (those snake-like devices surgeons use to glimpse your insides).
Once in the body, the camera can take high quality images of tissue just 3 millimeters from the lens. Until now, such tiny, high quality lenses were impossible to make. But remarkably, the researchers say, they designed, built, and tested the tiny camera in just a few hours.
The camera could have other uses as well, including for incognito security systems or vision for micro-robots.
This tiny camera can be injected into your body

Using something called a "femtosecond direct laser writing system," they 3D printed a three-part lens, no bigger than a grain of salt, onto the end of a fiber optic cable the width of two human hairs. The researchers say the device could be injected into previously difficult areas to photograph such as inside an organ--even the brain--and pave the way for next-generation endoscopes (those snake-like devices surgeons use to glimpse your insides).
Once in the body, the camera can take high quality images of tissue just 3 millimeters from the lens. Until now, such tiny, high quality lenses were impossible to make. But remarkably, the researchers say, they designed, built, and tested the tiny camera in just a few hours.
The camera could have other uses as well, including for incognito security systems or vision for micro-robots.
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