~30deg fov 24x24 resolution 940nm IR
50g, approx 3cm^3
max range in 15fps mode @ center of fov, 50% albedo
outdoor 20m indoor 40m
30fps default mode (range expectations not stated for this mode)
5mm accuracy @ 10m (unclear in which mode)
no word on price
first party info: https://pro.sony/ue_US/products/lidar/as-dt1
[1] Sony AS-DT1: Smallest and Lightest Precision Lidar Sensor
I was thinking.. Now THAT'S small. :)
I don't know where you'd have room for one of these but no room for something like the D435 which has a resolution of 1280 × 720 on the depth side and an RGB sensor. Maybe robotic vacuum cleaners or something.
Here bytedance release very good model that combine their depth anything v2 with such low density apple lidar depth map: https://promptda.github.io/
Really needs price info. There's good expensive stuff, and not very good cheap stuff, in this space.
[1] https://www.digikey.com/en/product-highlight/l/lightware-lid...
Also 360 vs 30 degrees of fov.
I think it's for a completely different market (although I'm not sure which one...)
https://www.ifixit.com/products/iphone-13-pro-lidar-sensor
This Sony one looks huge in comparison. Am I missing some fundamental difference between them?
There are several ways to do this. At short ranges, they all work. Then it gets hard, because not much energy is coming back.
As far as I can tell, it's true lidar?
Technical analysis: https://4da.tech/?p=582
Being used for science: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-021-01763-9
> Sony Electronics Announces the World's Smallest and Lightest[1]
> [1] As a 3D LiDAR with a measurement range of 10m or more under sunny outdoor conditions (excluding modules), according to Sony research, as of April 2025
So the smallest within those constraints, not overall. The iPhone ones are smaller. (And I think they also use Sony receivers?)
https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/sony-electronics-an...