Less than two weeks after the launch of the new Galaxy S23 Ultra and its little brothers in the S23 series, Samsung has shown some details of the sensor ISOCELL HP2 that will integrate the most capable terminal of the company for this year.
Endowed with a resolution of 200 Megapixels to which a combination of pixels (pixel binning) will be applied to offer final 12.5 MP captures, taking advantage of the information of groups of 16 pixels for each final pixel. In that size of 1/1.3 (although the size of the sensors is not exact as we explain in this article) we will have photo diodes or 0.6 micrometer sensors.
It will also have a 4 to 1 pixel binning mode with which we can get final 50-megapixel images, that same mode will also be used for video. In fact, thanks to the 4 to 1 combination, the ISOCELL HP2 sensor of the Galaxy S23 Ultra will be capable of recording 8K videos at 30 FPS, 6 FPS more than the previous generation of the Galaxy S22 range. If we lower the resolution to 4K, we will have recording at 60 FPS with support for HDR
The ISOCELL HP2 is already in full-scale production, possibly to be ready for the Korean company’s big launch on February 1. It includes technologies such as improved autofocus with Super QPD to focus with 200 pixels, improving taking pictures in low light environments and being able to recognize vertical and horizontal patterns.
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Anthony Delgado
Computer Engineer by training, writer and hardware analyst at Geeknetic since 2011. I love gutting everything that comes my way, especially the latest hardware that we receive here for reviews. In my free time I mess around with 3d printers, drones and other gadgets. For anything here you have me.