http://www.osa.org/About_Osa/Newsroom/News_Releases/Releases/10.2011/Researchers-Transform-iPhone.aspxFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact:
Angela Stark
The Optical Society
+1.202.416.1443
astark@osa.org
Researchers Transform iPhone into High-quality Medical Imaging Device
Advanced, life-saving capabilities become a simple add-on to handheld technology you already use
WASHINGTON, Oct. 3—In a feat of technology tweaking that would rival MacGyver, a team of researchers from the University of California, Davis has transformed everyday iPhones into medical-quality imaging and chemical detection devices. With materials that cost about as much as a typical app, the decked-out smartphones are able to use their heightened senses to perform detailed microscopy and spectroscopy. The team will present their findings at the Optical Society's (
http://www.osa.org/">OSA) Annual Meeting,
http://www.frontiersinoptics.com/">Frontiers in Optics (FiO) 2011, taking place in San Jose, Calif. Oct. 16-20.
The enhanced iPhones could help doctors and nurses diagnose blood diseases in developing nations where many hospitals and rural clinics have limited or no access to laboratory equipment. In addition to bringing new sensing capabilities where they are needed most, the modified phones are also able transmit the real-time data to colleagues around the globe for further analysis and diagnosis.
"Field workers could put a blood sample on a slide, take a picture, and send it to specialists to analyze," says Sebastian Wachsmann-Hogiu, a physicist with UC Davis' Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine and the Center for Biophotonics, Science and Technology, and lead author of the research to be presented at FiO.
Microscope Makeover
…
To build the microscope's lens, Kaiqin Chu, a post-doctoral researcher in optics, inserted a ball lens into a hole in a rubber sheet, then simply taped the sheet over the smartphone's camera.
…