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  • What's up? I'm Destin. This is Smarter Every Day. Get your phone out. You see that little camera assembly there?

  • Let's take it out of the phone. Yep. That's what it looks like. So here's what we're going to do. The first thing

  • we're going to do is pop the lens off, and there we go. That is called a CMOS

  • sensor. That is the camera on your phone.

  • Complimentary Metal-Oxide Semiconductor. So, when you take a photo or a video with your phone, you would think that it exposed that entire chip at one time,

  • like snapping a photo. That's not how it works. It actually scans down the chip, and that's how images are created.

  • This is called "rolling shutter," and it's the exact reason your cell phone makes weird shapes out of fast-moving objects.

  • This is a flatbed scanner, and I have a circular patch right here.

  • If I were to take this patch and set it face down on the scanner, and I were to start the scanner and

  • move the patch in the same direction as that moving row of pixels, check out

  • what happens. You're smart-- is this going to look like a circle? No! It's not a circle.

  • It's stretched out. And that makes sense, right? You're stretching that image because you're moving it along with the scanner. Now, conversely,

  • What's going to happen if instead of moving it with the scanning row pixels, we move opposite?

  • It's not going to stretch it out, is it? What's it going to do?

  • It's going to compress that circle down. A rolling shutter on your cell phone camera is very

  • much like this, except it goes from the top of the image all the way down

  • to the bottom. That means that what you're seeing is actually a lie.

  • It's like a stack up of several different moments. Okay, now that we understand how this works,

  • it's time to visualize it in the most turbo-awesome way possible. Over the past three years,

  • anytime I had a phone and a high-speed camera at the same place at the same time,

  • I would be on the lookout for rolling shutter events. And I would video it with the phone and then I would video it with a

  • high-speed camera, so that I could go back and manually

  • simulate rolling shutter so that I could understand exactly how the artifacts were created.

  • This is so stinking coo!l Your brain's going to get it, instantly! We'll start with iPhone video and then we'll go to the simulation.

  • This is awesome.

  • This is the first moment I realized I could fake rolling shutter.

  • I was in a turbo-prop over the Australian outback,

  • and I realized that the patterns would change as I rotated my phone.

  • I happened to have a high-speed camera with me, so I got it out and I started collecting data.

  • This is what your camera does dozens of times per second.

  • I noticed that the patterns looked very different depending on which way the propeller was rotating relative to the rolling shutter.

  • This is really beautiful, but I was kind of bummed that I didn't get to see the effect head-on to the propeller.

  • A couple of years later, though, when I was taking high altitude flight lessons near Pike's Peak in Colorado,

  • I finally got my chance to video a propeller head-on on the Tarmac.

  • The fidget spinner community has known for a while now that when it's really bright outside, a cell phone camera

  • videoing a fidget spinner will turn it into what they call "the thing."

  • It's just rolling shutter with a little bit of aliasing thrown in, but it looks like some kind of Ninja Alien throwing star.

  • Anyway, when you slow it down with a high-speed camera, you can really reveal the map that makes this look so weird

  • My buddy Ben plays both the Mandolin and the guitar, and it took us a really long time to get the rolling shutter effect to

  • show itself. But when we did, it was awesome!

  • Guitar strings are especially difficult because they vibrate so quickly that a normal high-speed camera isn't fast enough.

  • We had to record them at 20,000 or 28,000 frames per second to be able to run this simulation properly.

  • The last trick is something I had never seen before, but somebody told me about it. If you video a coin spinning,

  • you can see a swirl pattern on the edge of the coin.

  • Yep, that's also rolling shutter.

  • Obviously this took a really long time to make, and Henry from MinutePhysics made it possible.

  • He's the guy that figured out exactly how to make after effects

  • simulate rolling shutter. On the behind the scenes video, on the second channel, Henry

  • and I talked about what we were trying to accomplish.

  • Go check it out. And we'll, uh, we'll throw some love Henry's way. Also, I want to say thanks to the sponsor,

  • which is Audible. Before we talk about the book that I'm listening to on Audible right now,

  • let's go goof around with rolling shutter and some chickens. Okay, the book

  • I'm currently listening to on Audible is called "The Devil in the White City."

  • It's a really good book about the 1893 Chicago World's Fair. A fair that I had no idea changed America,

  • but it did. Also, America's first serial killer, so there's that. It's pretty crazy. I had no idea. It's a great story.

  • You should check it out. "Devil in the White City," by Erik Larson. You will enjoy it. You can get that by going to audible.com/smarter

  • That is two things: number one, you get a free audiobook;

  • number two, I get secret internet points because Audible knows you came from SmarterEveryDay.

  • And they're more likely to support Smarter Every Day in the future, and that's a big deal for me and the family.

  • I appreciate that. Anyway, if you see anybody that talks about rolling shutter, make sure they don't get confused with aliasing.

  • That's the wagon wheel effect. A lot of people get those two confused. I hope this video earned your subscription.

  • If it didn't, no big deal. I'm Destin, you're getting Smarter Every Day. Have a good one!

  • Bye.

  • Last chicken.

  • Brave chicken.

What's up? I'm Destin. This is Smarter Every Day. Get your phone out. You see that little camera assembly there?

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