Infrared Hyperspectral Wide-Field Camera
S-EOS is a global hyperspectral camera continuously tunable from 900 to 1620 nm or from 900 to 2500 nm. It generates a hyperspectral data-cube with spatial information along the X-Y axes and spectral information along the Z-axis. Photon etc.’s global-imaging technology extracts a data-cube from a handful of monochromatic images and without the need for image reconstruction. The field of view covered can be adjusted depending on the application and sample size. S-EOS is designed for reflectance, transmittance, and luminescence imaging.
Hyperspectral imaging can highlight differences that are difficult to see with the human eye.
S-EOS opens the door to
- Photovoltaic characterization
- Counterfeit examination
- Forensic research
- Food and plant sorting
Product Specifications
S-EOS 1.7 | S-EOS 2.5 | |
---|---|---|
Spectral range | 900 - 1620 nm | 900 - 2500 nm |
Spectral resolution (FWHM) | < 4 nm | < 5 nm |
Camera | Photon etc’s InGaAs camera (ZephIR™ 1.7 or Alizé™ 1.7) | Photon etc’s MCT camera (ZephIR™ 2.5) |
Spectral channels | Continuously tunable | Continuously tunable |
Entrance slit size | No slit / Full field of view measured for each wavelength | No slit / Full field of view measured for each wavelength |
Standard field of view (customizable) | 160 mm x 160 mm, 20 mm x 20 mm, other fields of view available upon request | 160 mm x 160 mm, 20 mm x 20 mm, other fields of view available upon request |
Options & Accessories | Absolute photometric calibration, Laser excitation, White light illumination, Micro-imaging modality: 5X, 10X. | Absolute photometric calibration, Laser excitation, White light illumination, Micro-imaging modality: 5X, 10X. |
Spec Sheet
White Papers
Hyperspectral Imaging in Counterfeit Ink and Banknote Identification
Authors Marie-Christine Ferland, Marc Verhaegen & Vincent Cardin
Abstract
Dive deeper into document authentication with our recently published white paper: "Hyperspectral Imaging in Counterfeit Ink and Banknote Identification."
Building on the insights from our recent application note, this white paper explores in greater detail the groundbreaking capabilities of our Grand-EOS hyperspectral camera. With its range of 400 to 1650 nm, the Grand-EOS not only identifies…