91ÇàÇà²Ý

Events

AGATE: Beyond human vision

Mini-sized sensor sees hundreds of colours to feed the world.
Agate sensor device
Agate hyperspectral sensor, image by Anne Kinnunen.

Miniature-sized hyperspectral sensor 

What if farmers could apply fertilizers and pesticides only on areas where they are needed? Or if we could tell if food is rotten on the inside by just looking at it?  

Hyperspectral imaging makes this possible. The AGATE sensor provides a hundred times more information than a regular camera or human eyes can ever collect, allowing us to see the invisible. Its tiny size makes hyperspectral imaging more accessible than ever. When applied to the whole food production chain from producing to logistics and consumption, the waste reduction potential becomes immense.

The hyperspectral imaging technology analyzes a wide spectrum of light with an interpretation algorithm. Traditional imaging assigns a main colour (red, green or blue) to each pixel, but hyperspectral imaging uses thousands of colours to capture the full range of information within a single pixel. 

This level of detail has the potential to impact several fields. For example, in food production, more precise information about nutrient distribution on the field or ripeness of fruit could decrease excessive fertilisation and food waste. In just a few years, Agate may become standard equipment for smartphones, drones, or self-driving cars.

Agate team

Contact

Mikael Westerlund

Agate sensor closeup

Insights beyond the visible

Informative live event on the fascinating world of hyperspectral imaging.

Events
In this bird’s-eye view photo, three people are exploring the Designs for a Cooler Planet exhibition. They are examining materials and accompanying descriptions displayed on white tables.

Designs for a Cooler Planet

Aalto University’s biggest annual exhibition presents cross-disciplinary experiments. Come explore students’ and researchers’ acts of change.

Agate hyperspectral imaging sensor

We are leading the imaging technology disruption, bringing hyperspectral imaging capabilities into your palms, drones, cars, and industrial equipment.

A fingertip-sized on-chip spectrometer in the foreground compared to a commercial benchtop-size spectrometer in the background. Photo: Aalto University

Tapping hidden visual information: An all-in-one detector for thousands of colours

A new chip from Aalto researchers puts photonic information at our fingertips.

News
  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!