Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Single-shot compressed ultrafast photography at one hundred billion frames per second

Mahesh Shastry just sent me the following:

Hi Igor,


I recently stumbled upon this amazing application of compressive imaging. Nuit-Blanche readers may be interested in this paper (I am NOT one of the authors!):



Thanks,
Sincerely,
Mahesh
 Thanks Mahesh !




Single-shot compressed ultrafast photography at one hundred billion frames per second by Liang Gao, Jinyang Liang, Chiye Li & Lihong V. Wang

The capture of transient scenes at high imaging speed has been long sought by photographers 1, 2, 3, 4, with early examples being the well known recording in 1878 of a horse in motion 5 and the 1887 photograph of a supersonic bullet 6. However, not until the late twentieth century were breakthroughs achieved in demonstrating ultrahigh-speed imaging (more than 105 frames per second) 7. In particular, the introduction of electronic imaging sensors based on the charge-coupled device (CCD) or complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor (CMOS) technology revolutionized high-speed photography, enabling acquisition rates of up to 107 frames per second 8. Despite these sensors’ widespread impact, further increasing frame rates using CCD or CMOS technology is fundamentally limited by their on-chip storage and electronic readout speed 9. Here we demonstrate a two-dimensional dynamic imaging technique, compressed ultrafast photography (CUP), which can capture non-repetitive time-evolving events at up to 1011 frames per second. Compared with existing ultrafast imaging techniques, CUP has the prominent advantage of measuring an x–y–t (x, y, spatial coordinates; t, time) scene with a single camera snapshot, thereby allowing observation of transient events with temporal resolution as tens of picoseconds. Furthermore, akin to traditional photography, CUP is receive-only, and so does not need the specialized active illumination required by other single-shot ultrafast imagers 2, 3. As a result, CUP can image a variety of luminescent—such as fluorescent or bioluminescent—objects. Using CUP, we visualize four fundamental physical phenomena with single laser shots only: laser pulse reflection and refraction, photon racing in two media, and faster-than-light propagation of non-information (that is, motion that appears faster than the speed of light but cannot convey information). Given CUP’s capability, we expect it to find widespread applications in both fundamental and applied sciences, including biomedical research.
 
 
 
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