How is physics involved in the application of cameras?

AI Thread Summary
Cameras, particularly photographic ones, are primarily used for capturing images, but their applications extend far beyond this basic function. High-speed cameras are employed in physics for techniques like particle image velocimetry (PIV) and detecting infrared scatter. The definition of a camera can vary; it can include systems without lenses or those designed for specific measurements, such as spectroscopic cameras. Recognizing cameras as generic optical systems opens up numerous applications, including time-lapse photography and light scattering measurements. Overall, the versatility of cameras in scientific and practical applications highlights their importance in various fields.
parcerita
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So for a project I am asked to give examples of how cameras are used. Of course the obvious use is clear, but how else (hopefully physics involved ways) are cameras used?

Forgot to mention, my project is on photographic not digital cameras.
 
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What is the obvious use?

How many "flavours" of this obvious use can you think of?
 
To me the obvious use is to take pictures. I really can't think of anything else a photographic camera is used for...
 
High speed cameras have a lot of physics-oriented applications. We use a camera for PIV (particle image velocimetry), to detect scatter IR rays.
 
This may seem odd, but have you defined what a camera "is"? For example, most people assume a camera is a lens and detector (film or digital), because that describes what most people use.

But, it's possible to have a camera with no lens (camera obscura). Or a camera that looks at 1-d lines rather than 2-d images. Or a spectroscopic camera that measures spectra rather than images.

Once you see that a camera is a generic optical system, you can come up with all kinds of applications. Time-lapse photography, real-time image processing, (static) light scattering measurements... all can be done with a simple camera.
 
parcerita said:
To me the obvious use is to take pictures.
Yes but: of what?
 
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