Simulation is more than Software

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The role of optical simulation in designing photo modules

Want to better understand the contribution of Ansys optical simulation solutions to an example of camera design?

Details

Ansys Zemax OpticStudio lets you design and optimize lens sequences for photographic modules. This is the core business of our customer Silina, who will present the use of the software for their applications in this webinar.

Speos enables the photographic module to be integrated into a macro environment to simulate a shot and generate a predictive synthetic photograph that takes all physical phenomena into account: light generation, its interaction with the materials in the scene and the camera's internal lenses, photon/electron conversion in the sensor and software processing of the electrical signal to obtain a developed image.

Lumerical simulates the interaction of photons with the silicon layers present in the sensor to determine the sensor's sensitivity to light on a nanoscopic scale and to feed the photon/electron conversion algorithm.

Benefits

This webinar will demonstrate the possible path and step-by-step integration of the three software packages in the service of optical design, thanks to a concrete use case from our customer Silina, a start-up that designs machines for bending sensors for the photography, space observation, microscopy, medical and telephony markets.

Target Group

This webinar is aimed at decision-makers and users who want to improve their workflow and implement real-life use cases with the Ansys Optics suite.

Agenda

Presentation of the optical portfolio applied to the design of Silina's photographic modules:

  • Ansys Zemax OpticStudio to design and optimize lens sequences for photographic modules 
  • Ansys Speos integrates the photographic module into a macro environment to simulate a shot and generate a computer-generated image.
  • Ansys Lumerical simulates the interaction of photons with the silicon layers present in the sensor, to determine the sensor's sensitivity to light on a nanoscopic scale.

Lecturer

PhD Wilfried Jahn
Co-founder- & PhD Optical Science and Engineering, SILINA