| Literature DB >> 29559708 |
Sven Augustin1,2, Sven Frohmann3, Peter Jung4, Heinz-Wilhelm Hübers5,3.
Abstract
Terahertz (THz) radiation meaning electromagnetic radiation in the range from 0.1 (3) to 10 (30) has the unique advantage of easily penetrating many obstructions while being non-hazardous to organic tissue since it is non-ionizing. A shortcoming of this domain is the limited availability of high-sensitivity detector arrays respective THz cameras with >1k pixels. To overcome the imaging limitations of the THz domain, compressive imaging in combination with an optically controllable THz spatial light modulator is a promising approach especially when used in a single-pixel imaging modality. The imaging fidelity, performance and speed of this approach depend crucially on the imaging patterns also called masks and their properties used in the imaging process. Therefore, in this paper, it is investigated how the image quality after reconstruction is specifically influenced by the different mask types and their properties in a compressive imaging modality. The evaluation uses an liquid-crystal display based projector as spatial light modulator to derive specific guidelines for the use of binary and true greyscale masks in THz single-pixel imaging setups respective THz single-pixel cameras when used in far-field applications e.g. stand-off security imaging.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29559708 PMCID: PMC5861092 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-23313-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Scheme of the imaging process encountered in a THz-SPC. The beam coming from the THz source (Tx) is spatially modulated by a THz-SLM. The spatially modulated THz beam is directed to the scene of the camera and the radiation coming from the scene is detected using a single-pixel detector (Rx). With the knowledge of the spatial modulation patterns in connection with the measured responses an image of the scene can be reconstructed using a non-linear reconstruction algorithm.
Figure 2Reconstructions of a metallic edge using the NNLS algorithm for Bernoulli masks, Hadamard masks and Gaussian masks. A reconstruction using DCT masks was unsuccessful and is therefore not shown here. In each case the 100% case uses a number of measurements that is equal to the number of pixels. The size of the metallic edge is 13 in height and 5 in width (see photo on the left hand side for details).
Figure 3Imaged metal grid scene target using Bernoulli masks. Shown are the image reconstructions with a reduced number of considered measurements (100–30% when Bernoulli masks are commanded to the SPC. The scene target was a metallic grid. The target has 7 wide metallic bars and 7 mm wide open spaces (binary target - see photo for details).
Figure 4Single-pixel camera setup used for the measurements presented in the text (left-hand side). The THz-SPC in this case uses a commercially available projector as VIS-SLM and light source. The right-hand side shows the categorization with example masks investigated here.
Figure 5Mask responses of the different mask types investigated here. In each case a representative subset illustrating the specific responses is shown. The inset in the diagram shows various example masks and that for each measured mask ten individual values are acquired.