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Advanced Imaging synthesizes expert knowledge, high-end equipment, and artistic skill

Capturing irreplaceable evidence before it is altered

Advanced imaging as a service surpasses standard photography by delivering high-resolution stills, videography (including DSLR/mirrorless video), use of specialized lenses (macro, telephoto, wide-angle), slow-motion/high-speed capture, and imaging in constrained or challenging environments. RTI brings experience in forensic and technical imaging for site and evidence inspections, patent-related work (matching perspective to 2D drawings), color-accurate product documentation, and laboratory contexts potentially including high-speed capture. RTI’s advanced imaging service produce, high-detail results during one-time, time-limited inspections with unknown conditions, and capturing difficult subjects (older CRT screens, tight spaces, tricky lighting) that demand specialized tools and expertise. 

Higher-resolution, analysis-ready imagery; on-site adaptability; and a professional methodology supporting litigation, product development, and technical analysis.

High-resolution images serve as analytical tools, revealing information invisible to the naked eye.

Capturing high-quality, analysis-ready imagery in one-time, time-limited inspections with unknown conditions requires rapid adaptation, specialized equipment, and expert judgment. This directly impacts evidence reliability and downstream analysis in forensic and technical cases.
The current approach uses professional mirrorless cameras, interchangeable
lenses (wide, telephoto, macro), high-resolution sensors, and a systematic
(wide-to-detail) process with on-site problem-solving for lighting and access constraints.
Scenarios often allow only one opportunity to document evidence prior to destructive work. Examples include tight spaces (inside a aircraft compartments), challenging lighting, and constrained angles requiring special tools. Context: inspections are unpredictable; equipment is
complex and must be operated quickly without fumbling. Stakeholders: field
imaging specialists, litigation/forensic clients, and expert teams relying on
imagery for reports.

Patent-related imaging demands precise perspective control, parallax management, and color accuracy to match 2D drawings and present products accurately, which is technically demanding and time-consuming. Falling short can undermine patent documentation, comparisons, and litigation exhibits.