3,476 research outputs found
Frequency-modulated continuous-wave LiDAR compressive depth-mapping
We present an inexpensive architecture for converting a frequency-modulated
continuous-wave LiDAR system into a compressive-sensing based depth-mapping
camera. Instead of raster scanning to obtain depth-maps, compressive sensing is
used to significantly reduce the number of measurements. Ideally, our approach
requires two difference detectors. % but can operate with only one at the cost
of doubling the number of measurments. Due to the large flux entering the
detectors, the signal amplification from heterodyne detection, and the effects
of background subtraction from compressive sensing, the system can obtain
higher signal-to-noise ratios over detector-array based schemes while scanning
a scene faster than is possible through raster-scanning. %Moreover, we show how
a single total-variation minimization and two fast least-squares minimizations,
instead of a single complex nonlinear minimization, can efficiently recover
high-resolution depth-maps with minimal computational overhead. Moreover, by
efficiently storing only data points from measurements of an
pixel scene, we can easily extract depths by solving only two linear equations
with efficient convex-optimization methods
Compressive sensing adaptation for polynomial chaos expansions
Basis adaptation in Homogeneous Chaos spaces rely on a suitable rotation of
the underlying Gaussian germ. Several rotations have been proposed in the
literature resulting in adaptations with different convergence properties. In
this paper we present a new adaptation mechanism that builds on compressive
sensing algorithms, resulting in a reduced polynomial chaos approximation with
optimal sparsity. The developed adaptation algorithm consists of a two-step
optimization procedure that computes the optimal coefficients and the input
projection matrix of a low dimensional chaos expansion with respect to an
optimally rotated basis. We demonstrate the attractive features of our
algorithm through several numerical examples including the application on
Large-Eddy Simulation (LES) calculations of turbulent combustion in a HIFiRE
scramjet engine.Comment: Submitted to Journal of Computational Physic
Photon-Efficient Computational 3D and Reflectivity Imaging with Single-Photon Detectors
Capturing depth and reflectivity images at low light levels from active
illumination of a scene has wide-ranging applications. Conventionally, even
with single-photon detectors, hundreds of photon detections are needed at each
pixel to mitigate Poisson noise. We develop a robust method for estimating
depth and reflectivity using on the order of 1 detected photon per pixel
averaged over the scene. Our computational imager combines physically accurate
single-photon counting statistics with exploitation of the spatial correlations
present in real-world reflectivity and 3D structure. Experiments conducted in
the presence of strong background light demonstrate that our computational
imager is able to accurately recover scene depth and reflectivity, while
traditional maximum-likelihood based imaging methods lead to estimates that are
highly noisy. Our framework increases photon efficiency 100-fold over
traditional processing and also improves, somewhat, upon first-photon imaging
under a total acquisition time constraint in raster-scanned operation. Thus our
new imager will be useful for rapid, low-power, and noise-tolerant active
optical imaging, and its fixed dwell time will facilitate parallelization
through use of a detector array.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure
Compressive Holographic Video
Compressed sensing has been discussed separately in spatial and temporal
domains. Compressive holography has been introduced as a method that allows 3D
tomographic reconstruction at different depths from a single 2D image. Coded
exposure is a temporal compressed sensing method for high speed video
acquisition. In this work, we combine compressive holography and coded exposure
techniques and extend the discussion to 4D reconstruction in space and time
from one coded captured image. In our prototype, digital in-line holography was
used for imaging macroscopic, fast moving objects. The pixel-wise temporal
modulation was implemented by a digital micromirror device. In this paper we
demonstrate temporal super resolution with multiple depths recovery
from a single image. Two examples are presented for the purpose of recording
subtle vibrations and tracking small particles within 5 ms.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figure
Neural-inspired sensors enable sparse, efficient classification of spatiotemporal data
Sparse sensor placement is a central challenge in the efficient
characterization of complex systems when the cost of acquiring and processing
data is high. Leading sparse sensing methods typically exploit either spatial
or temporal correlations, but rarely both. This work introduces a new sparse
sensor optimization that is designed to leverage the rich spatiotemporal
coherence exhibited by many systems. Our approach is inspired by the remarkable
performance of flying insects, which use a few embedded strain-sensitive
neurons to achieve rapid and robust flight control despite large gust
disturbances. Specifically, we draw on nature to identify targeted
neural-inspired sensors on a flapping wing to detect body rotation. This task
is particularly challenging as the rotational twisting mode is three
orders-of-magnitude smaller than the flapping modes. We show that nonlinear
filtering in time, built to mimic strain-sensitive neurons, is essential to
detect rotation, whereas instantaneous measurements fail. Optimized sparse
sensor placement results in efficient classification with approximately ten
sensors, achieving the same accuracy and noise robustness as full measurements
consisting of hundreds of sensors. Sparse sensing with neural inspired encoding
establishes a new paradigm in hyper-efficient, embodied sensing of
spatiotemporal data and sheds light on principles of biological sensing for
agile flight control.Comment: 21 pages, 19 figure
Ghost imaging lidar via sparsity constraints
For remote sensing, high-resolution imaging techniques are helpful to catch
more characteristic information of the target. We extend pseudo-thermal light
ghost imaging to the area of remote imaging and propose a ghost imaging lidar
system. For the first time, we demonstrate experimentally that the real-space
image of a target at about 1.0 km range with 20 mm resolution is achieved by
ghost imaging via sparsity constraints (GISC) technique. The characters of GISC
technique compared to the existing lidar systems are also discussed.Comment: 4pages, 3figure
- …