Author:
Pearce Emma,Wolley Osian,Mekhail Simon P.,Gregory Thomas,Gemmell Nathan R.,Oulton Rupert F.,Clark Alex S.,Phillips Chris C.,Padgett Miles J.
Abstract
AbstractImaging with undetected photons relies upon nonlinear interferometry to extract the spatial image from an infrared probe beam and reveal it in the interference pattern of an easier-to-detect visible beam. Typically, the transmission and phase images are extracted using phase-shifting techniques and combining interferograms from multiple frames. Here we show that off-axis digital holography enables reconstruction of both transmission and phase images at the infrared wavelength from a single interferogram, and hence a single frame, recorded in the visible. This eliminates the need for phase stepping and multiple acquisitions, thereby greatly reducing total measurement time for imaging with long acquisition times at low flux or enabling video-rate imaging at higher flux. With this single-frame acquisition technique, we are able to reconstruct transmission images of an object in the infrared beam with a signal-to-noise ratio of $$3.680\,\pm \,0.004$$
3.680
±
0.004
at 10 frames per second, and record a dynamic scene in the infrared beam at 33 frames per second.
Funder
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
Leverhulme Trust
Royal Society
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC