Nikon announced the availability of new products this week Digital Sight 50M monochrome camera Equipped with a 35.8 x 23.8 mm Nikon FX-format monochrome CMOS image sensor, the camera can capture 16-megapixel images with a resolution of 9552 x 6336 pixels. Frames per second (fps). Other features of the monochrome camera include ROI mode which provides a resolution of 640 x 480 pixels at 225.9 fps.
The Nikon 50M Digital Sight monochrome camera features an F-mount lens mount and features dual USB 3.2 GEN 1 ports, one to connect to your computer and the other for external synchronization of inputs/outputs. For more details and full specifications, please visit Nikon’s official website at the link below. Unfortunately, Nikon has yet to announce pricing or global availability information, but as always we will keep you updated as information becomes available.
Nikon monochrome camera
Nikon has developed state-of-the-art research microscopes and digital imaging systems and leverages this technology to create a microscope camera specifically designed for high-volume, high-resolution cell screening with an unprecedented 60-megapixel resolution. Developed Digital Sight 50M. By using it in combination with NIS-Elements (sold separately), the workflow from image acquisition to analysis can be automated, contributing to the improvement of high-throughput screening from search/identification to analysis.
“The Digital Sight 50M acquires 60-megapixel wide-field images, enabling high-precision analysis of large-volume samples such as cell culture well plates.*1 This camera can acquire images of individuals. Detecting wells*2 in a single shot and acquiring an image of the region of interest (ROI) at higher magnification makes it possible to identify the region without the aid of the naked eye.”
“The Digital Sight 50M has a Region of Interest (ROI) mode that allows the user to specify an area of the sample to acquire images at high speed. Using ROI and employing a selectable binning mode, a maximum frame rate of 225.9 fps (640 x 480 pixels, 3 x 3 binning), which allows efficient acquisition of fast signals of moving samples.”
Source: Nikon
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