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    Home»Innovation»Sony’s new LYTIA L910 camera sensor will turbocharge night shots and 4K capture on phones
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    Sony’s new LYTIA L910 camera sensor will turbocharge night shots and 4K capture on phones

    InfoForTechBy InfoForTechJune 17, 2026No Comments2 Mins Read
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    Sony’s new LYTIA L910 camera sensor will turbocharge night shots and 4K capture on phones
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    Sony just announced a new camera sensor that claims to handle dynamic range like a pro. The LYTIA L910, with 50-megapixel resolution, is headed to smartphones later this summer. 

    The standout specs include 100 dB of dynamic range and 4K/60fps video capture under maximum-brightness conditions, all while improving power efficiency.

    If your phone’s camera has ever blown out a night scene with bright LED signs in the background, or made a dark corner completely unreadable, this sensor fixes exactly that.

    Adult, Female, Person
    Sony

    So what makes the LYTIA L910 different?

    Part of the reason the L910 can handle tough lighting so well is LOFIC, short for Lateral Overflow Integration Capacitor. 

    Instead of losing highlight detail when a bright light saturates the sensor, LOFIC stores the extra charge, allowing the camera to retain textures and details in the brighter parts of the picture and preventing blown-out highlights.

    The second is Triple Conversion Gain HDR. Instead of combining multiple exposures, it reads the same single exposure three times at different sensitivity levels and then combines them for a better result. 

    Together, they deliver 100 dB, or 16.6 stops, of dynamic range from a single shot without merging multiple exposures. It also removes the motion blur that comes from combining multiple frames and doesn’t flicker under artificial lighting. 

    Electronics, Screen, Computer Hardware
    Sony

    What else?

    Sony claims that the L910 also cuts random noise by around 30% compared to its previous LYTIA 828 sensor (found on phones like the Motorola Razr Fold), resulting in clearer pictures.

    Shooting 4K videos at 60 fps in HDR is among the most demanding tasks for a smartphone’s camera, and, naturally, it drains the battery faster. 

    Sony says that the new circuit design reduces the time required to convert light into digital data, lowering how hard the sensor works and, therefore, the amount of power it draws. 

    The result is that phones using the L910 sensor should be able to record 4K 60fps HDR videos while consuming less battery. Moreover, smartphones equipped with the sensor should be much better at recording videos in low-light conditions while being lighter on battery.

    Sony has scheduled mass production shipments for summer 2026, with no phone partnerships confirmed yet.

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