A method and system for nuclear imaging normally involve detection of energy by producing at most two or three bursts of photons at a time in response to events including incident gamma radiation. F number of sharing central groups of seven photodetectors, depending on the photodetector array size, is arranged in a honeycomb array for viewing zones of up to F bursts of optical photons at a time for each continuous detector and converting the bursts of optical photons into signal outputs, where each of the central groups is associated with a zone. This enables the detector sensitivity to be increased by as much as two orders of magnitude, and to exchange some of this excess sensitivity to achieve spatial resolution comparable to those in CT and MRI, which would be unprecedented. Signal outputs that are due to scattered incident radiation are rejected for each of the central groups to reduce image blurring, thereby further improving image quality. For planar imaging, the energy and position signals of up to the F number of valid events are generated once every deadtime period and transferred to computer memory for image display and data analysis. The number of valid events detected is up to 6F for SPECT and up to 3F for PET imaging.