Single-shot thermal ghost imaging using wavelength-division multiplexing

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Abstract

Ghost imaging (GI) is an emerging technique that reconstructs the target scene from its correlated measurements with a sequence of patterns. Restricted by the multi-shot principle, GI usually requires long acquisition time and is limited in observation of dynamic scenes. To handle this problem, this paper proposes a single-shot thermal ghost imaging scheme via a wavelength-division multiplexing technique. Specifically, we generate thousands of correlated patterns simultaneously by modulating a broadband light source with a wavelength dependent diffuser. These patterns carry the scene's spatial information and then the correlated photons are coupled into a spectrometer for the final reconstruction. This technique increases the speed of ghost imaging and promotes the applications in dynamic ghost imaging with high scalability and compatibility.

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Deng, C., Suo, J., Wang, Y., Zhang, Z., & Dai, Q. (2018). Single-shot thermal ghost imaging using wavelength-division multiplexing. Applied Physics Letters, 112(5). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5001750

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