Affiliation:
1. University of Washington
Abstract
Foveated imaging provides a better tradeoff between situational
awareness (field of view) and resolution, and is critical in long
wavelength infrared regimes because of the size, weight, power, and
cost of thermal sensors. We demonstrate computational foveated imaging
by exploiting the ability of a meta-optical frontend to discriminate
between different polarization states and a computational backend to
reconstruct the captured image/video. The frontend is a three-element
optic: the first element, which we call the “foveal” element, is a
metalens that focuses s-polarized light at a distance of f1 without affecting the p-polarized
light; the second element, which we call the “perifovea” element, is
another metalens that focuses p-polarized light at a distance of f2 without affecting the s-polarized light. The third element is
a freely rotating polarizer that dynamically changes the mixing ratios
between the two polarization states. Both the foveal element (focal length=150mm; diameter=75mm) and the perifoveal element (focal length=25mm; diameter=25mm) were fabricated as
polarization-sensitive, all-silicon, meta surfaces resulting in a
large-aperture, 1:6 foveal expansion, thermal imaging capability. A
computational backend then utilizes a deep image prior to separate the
resultant multiplexed image or video into a foveated image consisting
of a high resolution center and a lower-resolution large field of view
context. We build a prototype system and demonstrate 12 frames per
second real-time, thermal, foveated image and video capture..
Funder
Vannevar Bush Faculty
Fellowship
Air Force Office of Scientific
Research
National Science Foundation
Office of Naval Research
Subject
Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
Cited by
4 articles.
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