Retired University Astrophysics Professor: These truly wonderfully and very inspiring videos should be a complete 101 College Course! Wonderfully done, and truly the most inspiring teaching aid I've ever seen! Kudos, and please continue building your library for all the world to learn from!
Good rule of thumb for Americans (and others blessed by the customary/Imperial system): The speed of light is about 1 foot / nanosecond. The propagation speed of electromotive force (that's voltage to you, bub) in copper varies depending on various factors, but inside a processor it's about 1/3 the speed of light and in very good cables it's about 9/10 the speed of light. Using those figures (and propagation delay numbers from datasheets), you can probably ballpark the time it takes between activating a signal to turn on a laser and getting a return back from your sensor. If you code the part where you turn on the laser and look for the return in assembly and count clock cycles, you can likely DIY your own crude LIDAR. Do a bit of calibration and you're set. Hey, found a new project to try. I've got some old CDROMs around here somewhere...
Is all this invisible pulse laser mapping causing mass blindness and eye damage ? I noticed the new cars have laser lights which cause eye damage. If you drive long distance at night nowadays you end up with stinging eyes. I have a laser torch with the same technology and it comes with a warning not to point at people’s eyes.
Photodiodes are also great for van Eck phreaking. I wonder if I can put that Scanse Sweep on my drone, combine the LIDAR data with GPS coords, and plot all the data to make a 3D point cloud of a large area?
Hello, i'm thinking if i could by one of these in the future, but i'm curious how well it work outside in a sunny day? I mean, LIDAR would be not faced directly to the sun, but would be looking around to detect obstacles.
great video I have a question. What happens when thousands of vehicles are on the road using different versions of lidar? won't those pulses of light interfere with each other's receivers? thanks
Thank you very much for this awesome video Shawn. I'm wondering if it would be possible to scan a dog and see only the body without the fur. Might you know if the LiDAR can penetrate fur or hair or clothing? Thank you very much!
The light travels from laser to detector, what component can be used as detector? I guess it is not simple phototransistor, it is something similar to camera? Can I buy it somewhere i make my own LIDAR module?
why not spin a mirror instead you would be able to spin it faster obviously. sampleing rate is still a thing but this is awsome tbvh maybe i get into robotics?
True, and these devices take this effect into account (else, they wouldn't work) by calibrating them, I'd imagine. Using the speed of light in vacuum is likely just to get the point across on how the LiDAR process works at a basic level
Unless you're measuring things very far away, the (very slight) difference doesn't really matter. The margin of error in the measurements (if this video is to believed) is several orders of magnitude greater than the error caused by light being slowed by air.
Perhaps the two most critical things, you failed to mention. First, laser beams bounce back in the direction they came from, not as if they hit a mirror. And second, single photons can be split up to 100 to 1 right now and still be effective. This makes for what is almost an unlimited potential in which a "driverless car" is the poster child. Also, "xyz" point clouds can be generated with simple photogrammetry which has overshadowed Lidar in some cases because it is so much cheaper. Try watching other people's videos.
Retired University Astrophysics Professor: These truly wonderfully and very inspiring videos should be a complete 101 College Course!
Wonderfully done, and truly the most inspiring teaching aid I've ever seen!
Kudos, and please continue building your library for all the world to learn from!
Love the bloopers at the end ...
great video, 10/10 for engagement factor.
I am willing to make it with the IR sensor module
Good rule of thumb for Americans (and others blessed by the customary/Imperial system): The speed of light is about 1 foot / nanosecond. The propagation speed of electromotive force (that's voltage to you, bub) in copper varies depending on various factors, but inside a processor it's about 1/3 the speed of light and in very good cables it's about 9/10 the speed of light.
Using those figures (and propagation delay numbers from datasheets), you can probably ballpark the time it takes between activating a signal to turn on a laser and getting a return back from your sensor. If you code the part where you turn on the laser and look for the return in assembly and count clock cycles, you can likely DIY your own crude LIDAR. Do a bit of calibration and you're set.
Hey, found a new project to try. I've got some old CDROMs around here somewhere...
Awesome informative channel
Is all this invisible pulse laser mapping causing mass blindness and eye damage ?
I noticed the new cars have laser lights which cause eye damage.
If you drive long distance at night nowadays you end up with stinging eyes.
I have a laser torch with the same technology and it comes with a warning not to point at people’s eyes.
Photodiodes are also great for van Eck phreaking. I wonder if I can put that Scanse Sweep on my drone, combine the LIDAR data with GPS coords, and plot all the data to make a 3D point cloud of a large area?
Hello, i'm thinking if i could by one of these in the future, but i'm curious how well it work outside in a sunny day? I mean, LIDAR would be not faced directly to the sun, but would be looking around to detect obstacles.
OMG what a conclusion: "'I wish you luck in your world domination plans!" lol!!
Could they be used to see inside someone’s home?
HI thanks for the video. Is there any demo or instructions about how to set it up (connections, software, etc) like what's shown in 4:24 of the video?
can you please guide me to develop windar(measuring speed and direction of wind) using lidar
great video I have a question. What happens when thousands of vehicles are on the road using different versions of lidar? won't those pulses of light interfere with each other's receivers? thanks
LIDAR-Lite signal processing technology isn't subject to interference from other LIDAR-Lites or other IR sources.
This video is underrated
Thank you very much for this awesome video Shawn. I'm wondering if it would be possible to scan a dog and see only the body without the fur. Might you know if the LiDAR can penetrate fur or hair or clothing? Thank you very much!
Just use a laser strong enough to burn away the fur. But may turn the dog into a fried chicken nuggets.
Nice video, very useful and funny.
What's that software that plots the points to get the map, I mean the map of your room that's created
Would computer vision be a replacement for sweeping lidar or used in conjunction?
Nice video ! Where did you get your metalic part for prototype ?!
The light travels from laser to detector, what component can be used as detector?
I guess it is not simple phototransistor, it is something similar to camera? Can I buy it somewhere i make my own LIDAR module?
how does a lidar measure 20ns? what kind of computer does that??
I'm having some troubles when trying to use a v3HP at an update rate of 1 Khz. Any helpful insight to share about that???
why not spin a mirror instead
you would be able to spin it faster obviously. sampleing rate is still a thing but this is awsome tbvh maybe i get into robotics?
Cool ideia, with a 45° mirror we don't need electronics and cables attached after the motor...
hello ... how the hell would u divert reflected light back via the mirror? u people dont think do u
@@helinick81 you use a coated dichroic beamsplitting mirror you idiot
I should have been impressed by LIDAR accuracy but instead my brain latched onto more proof that we landed on the moon lol
Can Lidar penetrate underground?
This channel is much underrated!
2:36 I'm almost sure the average distance is twice this one, great vid though.
Thank you Sparkfun
thank you for great quality content!
Cool, now only if I had $150 to spend on a single component.
theyr 30$ now :)
@@arklanbk where? :) link in the studio please for long-range 40m or similar :)
Calc wrong: 3 x10(8) x 2 x 10(-9) / 2 = 0.3m
He said 20ns (20x10^-9) or 2x10^-8
Excellent!
They bounced lasers off the moon before the reflector BS.
Thks, now I don't need a spinning LIDAR
Finger quotes? Triggered!
love it
Light speed is slower in air
True, and these devices take this effect into account (else, they wouldn't work) by calibrating them, I'd imagine. Using the speed of light in vacuum is likely just to get the point across on how the LiDAR process works at a basic level
Unless you're measuring things very far away, the (very slight) difference doesn't really matter. The margin of error in the measurements (if this video is to believed) is several orders of magnitude greater than the error caused by light being slowed by air.
Lmfao ya good on world domination plan 😂
i swear i read "shawn hymen"
Perhaps the two most critical things, you failed to mention. First, laser beams bounce back in the direction they came from, not as if they hit a mirror. And second, single photons can be split up to 100 to 1 right now and still be effective. This makes for what is almost an unlimited potential in which a "driverless car" is the poster child. Also, "xyz" point clouds can be generated with simple photogrammetry which has overshadowed Lidar in some cases because it is so much cheaper. Try watching other people's videos.
mesillahills I can't tell what you are talking about.
I don't care. Do your own damned research and stop being so lazy. You don't learn anything about anything unless you put out some effort on your own.