Yes. That is certainly a thing you can do. It's called Burst mode. But it suffers the same framerate problem as a regular continuous camera. Most Burst modes are in the 10 fps range or so. Some go as high as 60 fps. I don't think there are any "high speed" burst mode cameras, because that would be kinda pointless. You want a lower framerate because reality doesn't usually move fast enough to get a meaningfully different picture 1/10,000th of a second later.
Unless of course, you are trying to take a picture of a bullet, in which case you would just use a regular high speed camera, or fake the picture.
Yes. That is certainly a thing you can do. It's called Burst mode. But it suffers the same framerate problem as a regular continuous camera. Most Burst modes are in the 10 fps range or so. Some go as high as 60 fps. I don't think there are any "high speed" burst mode cameras, because that would be kinda pointless. You want a lower framerate because reality doesn't usually move fast enough to get a meaningfully different picture 1/10,000th of a second later.
Unless of course, you are trying to take a picture of a bullet, in which case you would just use a regular high speed camera, or fake the picture.