Hyperspectral terahertz microscopy via nonlinear ghost imaging

  • Olivieri L
  • Gongora J
  • Peters L
  • et al.
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Abstract

Ghost imaging, based on single-pixel detection and multiple pattern illumination, is a crucial investigative tool in difficult-to-access wavelength regions. In the terahertz domain, where high-resolution imagers are mostly unavailable, ghost imaging is an optimal approach to embed the temporal dimension, creating a “hyperspectral” imager. In this framework, high resolution is mostly out of reach. Hence, it is particularly critical to developing practical approaches for microscopy. Here we experimentally demonstrate time-resolved nonlinear ghost imaging, a technique based on near-field, optical-to-terahertz nonlinear conversion and detection of illumination patterns. We show how space–time coupling affects near-field time-domain imaging, and we develop a complete methodology that overcomes fundamental systematic reconstruction issues. Our theoretical-experimental platform enables high-fidelity subwavelength imaging and carries relaxed constraints on the nonlinear generation crystal thickness. Our work establishes a rigorous framework to reconstruct hyperspectral images of complex samples inaccessible through standard fixed-time methods.

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Olivieri, L., Gongora, J. S. T., Peters, L., Cecconi, V., Cutrona, A., Tunesi, J., … Peccianti, M. (2020). Hyperspectral terahertz microscopy via nonlinear ghost imaging. Optica, 7(2), 186. https://doi.org/10.1364/optica.381035

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