Canon K10514

| Metric | Canon K10514 | Sony IMX490 | Canon C700 | |--------|--------------|-------------|-------------| | Read noise (e⁻ rms) | 0.92 | 1.45 | 1.21 | | QE at 550 nm | 88% | 76% | 82% | | Dark current (e⁻/pix/s @ 30 °C) | 0.21 | 0.33 | 0.28 | | Dynamic range (dB) | 87.3 | 85.1 | 86.2 | | Max SNR (dB) | 48.0 (0.1 lux) | 44.5 (0.1 lux) | 46.1 (0.1 lux) |

Suddenly, the cooling coils hissed. The lens barrel, usually cool to the touch, began to heat up, glowing with a faint, violet incandescence. The lens was attempting to focus on something that wasn't in the room. It was hunting for a subject across the fourth dimension. canon k10514

Sato realized the danger. The camera was acting as a beacon. Every time they took a picture, they were sending a signal forward in time. And something in the future was looking back. | Metric | Canon K10514 | Sony IMX490

For office tasks, the 30-sheet ADF simplifies the process of scanning or faxing multi-page documents. It was hunting for a subject across the fourth dimension

The head engineer, Dr. Hiraku Sato, was a man obsessed with the mathematics of light. He believed that standard glass was too passive. He theorized that if you could create a lens with "active crystal matrix" elements—glass that changed density via an electric current—you could achieve optical clarity faster than the speed of causality.