Engineering:Speckle (interference)
Speckle, speckle pattern, or speckle noise is a granular noise texture degrading the quality as a consequence of interference among wavefronts in coherent imaging systems, such as radar, synthetic aperture radar (SAR), medical ultrasound and optical coherence tomography.[1][2][3][4] Speckle is not external noise; rather, it is an inherent fluctuation in diffuse reflections, because the scatterers are not identical for each cell, and the coherent illumination wave is highly sensitive to small variations in phase changes.[5]
Although scientists have investigated this phenomenon since the time of Newton[citation needed], speckles have come into prominence since the invention of the laser. Such reflections may occur on materials such as paper, white paint, rough surfaces, or in media with a large number of scattering particles in space, such as airborne dust or in cloudy liquids.[6] They have been used in a variety of applications in microscopy,[7][8] imaging,[9][10] and optical manipulation.[11][12][13]
The vast majority of surfaces, synthetic or natural, are extremely rough on the scale of the wavelength. We see the origin of this phenomenon if we model our reflectivity function as an array of scatterers. Because of the finite resolution, at any time we are receiving from a distribution of scatterers within the resolution cell. These scattered signals add coherently; that is, they add constructively and destructively depending on the relative phases of each scattered waveform. Speckle results from these patterns of constructive and destructive interference shown as bright and dark dots in the image.[14]
Speckle in conventional radar increases the mean grey level of a local area.[15] Speckle in SAR is generally serious, causing difficulties for image interpretation.[15][16] It is caused by coherent processing of backscattered signals from multiple distributed targets. In SAR oceanography, for example, speckle is caused by signals from elementary scatterers, the gravity-capillary ripples, and manifests as a pedestal image, beneath the image of the sea waves.[17][18]
The speckle can also represent some useful information, particularly when it is linked to the laser speckle and to the dynamic speckle phenomenon, where the changes of the spatial speckle pattern over time can be used as a measurement of the surface's activity, such as which is useful for measuring displacement fields via digital image correlation.
Formation
The speckle effect is a result of the interference of many waves of the same frequency, having different phases and amplitudes, which add together to give a resultant wave whose amplitude, and therefore intensity, varies randomly. If we model each wave by a vector, we can then see that if we add a number of vectors with random angles together, the length of the resulting vector can be anything from zero to the sum of the individual vector lengths—a 2-dimensional random walk, sometimes known as a drunkard's walk. In the limit of many interfering waves, and for polarised waves, the distribution of intensities (which go as the square of the vector's length) becomes exponential [math]\displaystyle{ P(I) = \frac{1}{\langle I \rangle} \exp\left(\frac{-I}{\langle I \rangle}\right) }[/math], where [math]\displaystyle{ \langle I \rangle }[/math] is the mean intensity.[1][2][19][20]
When a surface is illuminated by a light wave, according to diffraction theory, each point on an illuminated surface acts as a source of secondary spherical waves. The light at any point in the scattered light field is made up of waves which have been scattered from each point on the illuminated surface. If the surface is rough enough to create path-length differences exceeding one wavelength, giving rise to phase changes greater than 2π, the amplitude, and hence the intensity, of the resultant light varies randomly.
If light of low coherence (i.e., made up of many wavelengths) is used, a speckle pattern will not normally be observed, because the speckle patterns produced by individual wavelengths have different dimensions and will normally average one another out. However, we can observe speckle patterns in polychromatic light in some conditions.[21]
Types
Subjective speckles
When a rough surface which is illuminated by a coherent light (e.g. a laser beam) is imaged, a speckle pattern is observed in the image plane; this is called a "subjective speckle pattern" – see image above. It is called "subjective" because the detailed structure of the speckle pattern depends on the viewing system parameters; for instance, if the size of the lens aperture changes, the size of the speckles change. If the position of the imaging system is altered, the pattern will gradually change and will eventually be unrelated to the original speckle pattern.
We can explain this as follows. We can consider each point in the image to be illuminated by a finite area in the object.[clarification needed] We determine the size of this area by the diffraction-limited resolution of the lens which is given by the Airy disk whose diameter is 2.4λu/D, where λ is the wavelength of the light, u is the distance between the object and the lens, and D is the diameter of the lens aperture. (This is a simplified model of diffraction-limited imaging.)
The light at neighboring points in the image has been scattered from areas which have many points in common and the intensity of two such points will not differ much. However, two points in the image which are illuminated by areas in the object which are separated by the diameter of the Airy disk, have light intensities which are unrelated. This corresponds to a distance in the image of 2.4λv/D where v is the distance between the lens and the image. Thus, the "size" of the speckles in the image is of this order.
We can observe the change in speckle size with lens aperture by looking at a laser spot on a wall directly, and then through a very small hole. The speckles will be seen to increase significantly in size. Also, the speckle pattern itself will change when moving the position of the eye while keeping the laser pointer steady. A further proof that the speckle pattern is formed only in the image plane (in the specific case the eye's retina) is that the speckles will stay visible if the eye's focus is shifted away from the wall (this is different for an objective speckle pattern, where the speckle visibility is lost under defocusing).
Objective speckles
When laser light which has been scattered off a rough surface falls on another surface, it forms an "objective speckle pattern". If a photographic plate or another 2-D optical sensor is located within the scattered light field without a lens, a speckle pattern is obtained whose characteristics depend on the geometry of the system and the wavelength of the laser. The speckle pattern in the figure was obtained by pointing a laser beam at the surface of a mobile phone so that the scattered light fell onto an adjacent wall. A photograph was then taken of the speckle pattern formed on the wall. Strictly speaking, this also has a second subjective speckle pattern but its dimensions are much smaller than the objective pattern so it is not seen in the image.
Contributions from the whole of the scattering surface make up the light at a given point in the speckle pattern. The relative phases of these scattered waves vary across the scattering surface, so that the resulting phase on each point of the second surface varies randomly. The pattern is the same regardless of how it is imaged, just as if it were a painted pattern.
The "size" of the speckles is a function of the wavelength of the light, the size of the laser beam which illuminates the first surface, and the distance between this surface and the surface where the speckle pattern is formed. This is the case because when the angle of scattering changes such that the relative path difference between light scattered from the centre of the illuminated area compared with light scattered from the edge of the illuminated area changes by λ, the intensity becomes uncorrelated. Dainty[1] derives an expression for the mean speckle size as λz/L where L is the width of the illuminated area and z is the distance between the object and the location of the speckle pattern.
Near-field speckles
Objective speckles are usually obtained in the far field (also called Fraunhofer region, that is the zone where Fraunhofer diffraction happens). This means that they are generated "far" from the object that emits or scatters light. We can also observe speckles close to the scattering object, in the near field (also called Fresnel region, that is, the region where Fresnel diffraction happens). We call this kind of speckles near-field speckles. See near and far field for a more rigorous definition of "near" and "far".
The statistical properties of a far-field speckle pattern (i.e., the speckle form and dimension) depend on the form and dimension of the region hit by laser light. By contrast, a very interesting feature of near field speckles is that their statistical properties are closely related to the form and structure of the scattering object: objects that scatter at high angles generate small near field speckles, and vice versa. Under Rayleigh–Gans condition, in particular, speckle dimension mirrors the average dimension of the scattering objects, while, in general, the statistical properties of near field speckles generated by a sample depend on the light scattering distribution.[22][23]
Actually, the condition under which the near field speckles appear has been described as more strict than the usual Fresnel condition.[24]
Applications
When lasers were first invented, the speckle effect was considered to be a severe drawback in using lasers to illuminate objects, particularly in holographic imaging because of the grainy image produced. Researchers later realized that speckle patterns could carry information about the object's surface deformations, and exploited this effect in holographic interferometry and electronic speckle pattern interferometry.[25] Speckle imaging and eye testing using speckle also use the speckle effect.
Speckle is the chief limitation of coherent lidar and coherent imaging in optical heterodyne detection.
In the case of near field speckles, the statistical properties depend on the light scattering distribution of a given sample. This allows the use of near field speckle analysis to detect the scattering distribution; this is the so-called near-field scattering technique.[26]
When the speckle pattern changes in time, due to changes in the illuminated surface, the phenomenon is known as dynamic speckle, and it can be used to measure activity, by means of, for example, an optical flow sensor (optical computer mouse). In biological materials, the phenomenon is known as biospeckle.
In a static environment, changes in speckle can also be used as a sensitive probe of the light source. This can be used in a wavemeter configuration, with a resolution around 1 attometre,[27] (equivalent to 1 part in 1012 of the wavelength, equivalent to measuring the length of a football field at the resolution of a single atom[28]) and can also stabilise the wavelength of lasers[29] or measure polarization.[30]
The disordered pattern produced by speckle has been used in quantum simulations with cold atoms. The randomly-distributed regions of bright and dark light act as an analog of disorder in solid-state systems, and are used to investigate localization phenomena.[31]
In fluorescence microscopy, a sub-diffraction-limited resolution can be obtained in 2D from saturable/photoconvertible pattern illumination techniques like stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy, ground state depletion (GSD) microscopy, and reversible saturable optical fluorescence transitions (RESOLFT). Adapting speckle patterns for use in these applications enables parallel 3D super-resolution imaging.[32]
Mitigation
Speckle is considered to be a problem in laser based display systems like the Laser TV. Speckle is usually quantified by the speckle contrast. Speckle contrast reduction is essentially the creation of many independent speckle patterns, so that they average out on the retina/detector. This can be achieved by,[33]
- Angle diversity: illumination from different angles
- Polarization diversity: use of different polarization states
- Wavelength diversity: use of laser sources which differ in wavelength by a small amount
Rotating diffusers—which destroys the spatial coherence of the laser light—can also be used to reduce the speckle. Moving/vibrating screens or fibers may also be solutions.[34] The Mitsubishi Laser TV appears to use such a screen which requires special care according to their product manual. A more detailed discussion on laser speckle reduction can be found here.[35]
Synthetic array heterodyne detection was developed to reduce speckle noise in coherent optical imaging and coherent differential absorption LIDAR.
Signal processing methods
In scientific applications, a spatial filter can be used to reduce speckle.
Several different methods are used to eliminate speckle, based upon different mathematical models of the phenomenon.[17] One method, for example, employs multiple-look processing (a.k.a. multi-look processing), averaging out the speckle by taking several "looks" at a target in a single radar sweep.[15][16] The average is the incoherent average of the looks.[16]
A second method involves using adaptive and non-adaptive filters on the signal processing (where adaptive filters adapt their weightings across the image to the speckle level, and non-adaptive filters apply the same weightings uniformly across the entire image). Such filtering also eliminates actual image information as well, in particular high-frequency information, and the applicability of filtering and the choice of filter type involves tradeoffs. Adaptive speckle filtering is better at preserving edges and detail in high-texture areas (such as forests or urban areas). Non-adaptive filtering is simpler to implement, and requires less computational power, however.[15][16]
There are two forms of non-adaptive speckle filtering: one based on the mean and one based upon the median (within a given rectangular area of pixels in the image). The latter is better at preserving edges whilst eliminating spikes, than the former is. There are many forms of adaptive speckle filtering,[36] including the Lee filter, the Frost filter, and the refined gamma maximum-A-posteriori (RGMAP) filter. They all rely upon three fundamental assumptions in their mathematical models, however:[15]
- Speckle in SAR is a multiplicative, i.e. it is in direct proportion to the local grey level in any area.[15]
- The signal and the speckle are statistically independent of each other.[15]
- The sample mean and variance of a single pixel are equal to the mean and variance of the local area that is centred on that pixel.[15]
The Lee filter converts the multiplicative model into an additive one, thereby reducing the problem of dealing with speckle to a known tractable case.[37]
Wavelet analysis
Recently, the use of wavelet transform has led to significant advances in image analysis. The main reason for the use of multiscale processing is the fact that many natural signals, when decomposed into wavelet bases are significantly simplified and can be modeled by known distributions. Besides, wavelet decomposition is able to separate signals at different scales and orientations. Therefore, the original signal at any scale and direction can be recovered and useful details are not lost.[38]
The first multiscale speckle reduction methods were based on the thresholding of detail subband coefficients.[39] Wavelet thresholding methods have some drawbacks: (i) the choice of threshold is made in an ad hoc manner, supposing that wanted and unwanted components of the signal obey their known distributions, irrespective of their scale and orientations; and (ii) the thresholding procedure generally results in some artifacts in the denoised image. To address these disadvantages, non-linear estimators, based on Bayes' theory were developed.[38][40]
Analogies
Speckle patterns can also be observed over time instead of space. This is the case of phase sensitive optical time-domain reflectometry, where multiple reflections of a coherent pulse generated at different instants interfere to produce a pseudorandom time-domain signal.[41]
Optical vortices in speckle patterns
Speckle interference pattern may be decomposed in the sum of plane waves. There exist a set of points where amplitude of electromagnetic field is exactly zero. Researchers had recognized these points as dislocations of wave trains.[42] We know these phase dislocations of electromagnetic fields as optical vortices.
There is a circular energy flow around each vortex core. Thus each vortex in the speckle pattern carries optical angular momentum. The angular momentum density is given by:[43]
- [math]\displaystyle{ \begin{align} \vec \mathbf{L} \left(\vec \mathbf{r}, t\right) &= \vec \mathbf{r} \times \vec \mathbf{S} \left(\vec \mathbf{r}, t\right) \\ \vec \mathbf{S} \left(\vec \mathbf{r}, t\right) &= \epsilon_0 c^2 \vec \mathbf{E} \left(\vec \mathbf{r}, t\right) \times \vec \mathbf{B} \left(\vec \mathbf{r}, t\right). \end{align} }[/math]
Typically vortices appear in speckle pattern in pairs. These vortex - antivortex pairs are placed randomly in space. One may show that electromagnetic angular momentum of each vortex pair is close to zero.[44] In phase conjugating mirrors based on stimulated Brillouin scattering optical vortices excite acoustical vortices.[45]
Apart from formal decomposition in Fourier series the speckle pattern may be composed for plane waves emitted by tilted regions of the phase plate. This approach significantly simplifies numerical modelling. 3D numerical emulation demonstrates the intertwining of vortices which leads to formation of ropes in optical speckle.[46]
See also
- Diffusing-wave spectroscopy
- Gaussian noise
- Laser speckle contrast imaging
- Salt and pepper noise
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Dainty, C., ed (1984). Laser Speckle and Related Phenomena (2nd ed.). Springer-Verlag. ISBN 978-0-387-13169-6.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Goodman, J. W. (1976). "Some fundamental properties of speckle". JOSA 66 (11): 1145–1150. doi:10.1364/josa.66.001145. Bibcode: 1976JOSA...66.1145G.
- ↑ Hua, Tao; Xie, Huimin; Wang, Simon; Hu, Zhenxing; Chen, Pengwan; Zhang, Qingming (2011). "Evaluation of the quality of a speckle pattern in the digital image correlation method by mean subset fluctuation". Optics & Laser Technology 43 (1): 9–13. doi:10.1016/j.optlastec.2010.04.010. Bibcode: 2011OptLT..43....9H.
- ↑ Lecompte, D.; Smits, A.; Bossuyt, Sven; Sol, H.; Vantomme, J.; Hemelrijck, D. Van; Habraken, A.M. (2006). "Quality assessment of speckle patterns for digital image correlation". Optics and Lasers in Engineering 44 (11): 1132–1145. doi:10.1016/j.optlaseng.2005.10.004. Bibcode: 2006OptLE..44.1132L. http://orbi.ulg.ac.be/handle/2268/15779.
- ↑ Moreira, Alberto; Prats-Iraola, Pau; Younis, Marwan; Krieger, Gerhard; Hajnsek, Irena; Papathanassiou, Konstantinos P. (2013). "A Tutorial on Synthetic Aperture Radar". IEEE Geoscience and Remote Sensing Magazine 1: 6–43. doi:10.1109/MGRS.2013.2248301. https://elib.dlr.de/82313/1/SAR-Tutorial-March-2013.pdf.
- ↑ Mandel, Savannah (2019-11-14). "Creating and controlling non-Rayleigh speckles". Scilight 2019 (46): 461111. doi:10.1063/10.0000279.
- ↑ Ventalon, Cathie; Mertz, Jerome (2006-08-07). "Dynamic speckle illumination microscopy with translated versus randomized speckle patterns". Optics Express 14 (16): 7198–7309. doi:10.1364/oe.14.007198. ISSN 1094-4087. PMID 19529088. Bibcode: 2006OExpr..14.7198V.
- ↑ Pascucci, M.; Ganesan, S.; Tripathi, A.; Katz, O.; Emiliani, V.; Guillon, M. (2019-03-22). "Compressive three-dimensional super-resolution microscopy with speckle-saturated fluorescence excitation" (in en). Nature Communications 10 (1): 1327. doi:10.1038/s41467-019-09297-5. ISSN 2041-1723. PMID 30902978. Bibcode: 2019NatCo..10.1327P.
- ↑ Katz, Ori; Bromberg, Yaron; Silberberg, Yaron (2009-09-28). "Compressive ghost imaging". Applied Physics Letters 95 (13): 131110. doi:10.1063/1.3238296. ISSN 0003-6951. Bibcode: 2009ApPhL..95m1110K.
- ↑ Dunn, Andrew K.; Bolay, Hayrunnisa; Moskowitz, Michael A.; Boas, David A. (2001-03-01). "Dynamic Imaging of Cerebral Blood Flow Using Laser Speckle" (in en). Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism 21 (3): 195–201. doi:10.1097/00004647-200103000-00002. ISSN 0271-678X. PMID 11295873.
- ↑ Bechinger, Clemens; Di Leonardo, Roberto; Löwen, Hartmut; Reichhardt, Charles; Volpe, Giorgio; Volpe, Giovanni (2016-11-23). "Active Particles in Complex and Crowded Environments". Reviews of Modern Physics 88 (4): 045006. doi:10.1103/revmodphys.88.045006. ISSN 0034-6861. Bibcode: 2016RvMP...88d5006B.
- ↑ Volpe, Giorgio; Volpe, Giovanni; Gigan, Sylvain (2014-02-05). "Brownian Motion in a Speckle Light Field: Tunable Anomalous Diffusion and Selective Optical Manipulation" (in en). Scientific Reports 4 (1): 3936. doi:10.1038/srep03936. ISSN 2045-2322. PMID 24496461. Bibcode: 2014NatSR...4E3936V.
- ↑ Volpe, Giorgio; Kurz, Lisa; Callegari, Agnese; Volpe, Giovanni; Gigan, Sylvain (2014-07-28). "Speckle optical tweezers: micromanipulation with random light fields" (in EN). Optics Express 22 (15): 18159–18167. doi:10.1364/OE.22.018159. ISSN 1094-4087. PMID 25089434. Bibcode: 2014OExpr..2218159V.
- ↑ M. Forouzanfar and H. Abrishami-Moghaddam, Ultrasound Speckle Reduction in the Complex Wavelet Domain, in Principles of Waveform Diversity and Design, M. Wicks, E. Mokole, S. Blunt, R. Schneible, and V. Amuso (eds.), SciTech Publishing, 2010, Section B - Part V: Remote Sensing, pp. 558-77.
- ↑ 15.0 15.1 15.2 15.3 15.4 15.5 15.6 15.7 Brandt Tso; Paul Mather (2009). Classification Methods for Remotely Sensed Data (2nd ed.). CRC Press. pp. 37–38. ISBN 9781420090727.
- ↑ 16.0 16.1 16.2 16.3 Giorgio Franceschetti; Riccardo Lanari (1999). Synthetic aperture radar processing. Electronic engineering systems series. CRC Press. pp. 145 et seq. ISBN 9780849378997.
- ↑ 17.0 17.1 Mikhail B. Kanevsky (2008). Radar imaging of the ocean waves. Elsevier. pp. 138. ISBN 9780444532091.
- ↑ Alexander Ya Pasmurov; Julius S. Zinoviev (2005). Radar imaging and holography. IEE radar, sonar and navigation series. 19. IET. pp. 175. ISBN 9780863415029.
- ↑ Bender, Nicholas; Yılmaz, Hasan; Bromberg, Yaron; Cao, Hui (2019-11-01). "Creating and controlling complex light". APL Photonics 4 (11): 110806. doi:10.1063/1.5132960. Bibcode: 2019APLP....4k0806B.
- ↑ Bender, Nicholas; Yılmaz, Hasan; Bromberg, Yaron; Cao, Hui (2018-05-20). "Customizing speckle intensity statistics" (in EN). Optica 5 (5): 595–600. doi:10.1364/OPTICA.5.000595. ISSN 2334-2536. Bibcode: 2018Optic...5..595B.
- ↑ McKechnie, T.S. (1976). "Image-plane speckle in partially coherent illumination". Optical and Quantum Electronics 8: 61–67. doi:10.1007/bf00620441.
- ↑ Giglio, M.; Carpineti, M.; Vailati, A. (2000). "Space Intensity Correlations in the Near Field of the Scattered Light: A Direct Measurement of the Density Correlation Function g(r)". Physical Review Letters 85 (7): 1416–1419. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.85.1416. PMID 10970518. Bibcode: 2000PhRvL..85.1416G.
- ↑ Giglio, M.; Carpineti, M.; Vailati, A.; Brogioli, D. (2001). "Near-Field Intensity Correlations of Scattered Light". Applied Optics 40 (24): 4036–40. doi:10.1364/AO.40.004036. PMID 18360438. Bibcode: 2001ApOpt..40.4036G.
- ↑ Cerbino, R. (2007). "Correlations of light in the deep Fresnel region: An extended Van Cittert and Zernike theorem". Physical Review A 75 (5): 053815. doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.75.053815. Bibcode: 2007PhRvA..75e3815C. http://doc.rero.ch/record/8497/files/cerbino_cld.pdf.
- ↑ Jones & Wykes, Robert & Catherine (1989). Holographic and Speckle Interferometry. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780511622465.
- ↑ Brogioli, D.; Vailati, A.; Giglio, M. (2002). "Heterodyne near-field scattering". Applied Physics Letters 81 (22): 4109–11. doi:10.1063/1.1524702. Bibcode: 2002ApPhL..81.4109B.
- ↑ Bruce, Graham D.; O’Donnell, Laura; Chen, Mingzhou; Dholakia, Kishan (2019-03-15). "Overcoming the speckle correlation limit to achieve a fiber wavemeter with attometer resolution". Optics Letters 44 (6): 1367–1370. doi:10.1364/OL.44.001367. ISSN 0146-9592. PMID 30874652. Bibcode: 2019OptL...44.1367B.
- ↑ Tudhope, Christine (7 March 2019). "New research could revolutionise fiber-optic communications". https://phys.org/news/2019-03-revolutionise-fiber-optic.html.
- ↑ Metzger, Nikolaus Klaus; Spesyvtsev, Roman; Bruce, Graham D.; Miller, Bill; Maker, Gareth T.; Malcolm, Graeme; Mazilu, Michael; Dholakia, Kishan (2017-06-05). "Harnessing speckle for a sub-femtometre resolved broadband wavemeter and laser stabilization" (in en). Nature Communications 8: 15610. doi:10.1038/ncomms15610. PMID 28580938. Bibcode: 2017NatCo...815610M.
- ↑ Facchin, Morgan; Bruce, Graham D.; Dholakia, Kishan; Dholakia, Kishan; Dholakia, Kishan (2020-05-15). "Speckle-based determination of the polarisation state of single and multiple laser beams" (in EN). OSA Continuum 3 (5): 1302–1313. doi:10.1364/OSAC.394117. ISSN 2578-7519. https://www.osapublishing.org/osac/abstract.cfm?uri=osac-3-5-1302.
- ↑ Billy, Juliette; Josse, Vincent; Zuo, Zhanchun; Bernard, Alain; Hambrecht, Ben; Lugan, Pierre; Clément, David; Sanchez-Palencia, Laurent et al. (2008-06-12). "Direct observation of Anderson localization of matter waves in a controlled disorder" (in en). Nature 453 (7197): 891–894. doi:10.1038/nature07000. ISSN 0028-0836. PMID 18548065. Bibcode: 2008Natur.453..891B.
- ↑ Bender, Nicholas; Sun, Mengyuan; Yılmaz, Hasan; Bewersdorf, Joerg; Bewersdorf, Joerg; Cao, Hui (2021-02-20). "Circumventing the optical diffraction limit with customized speckles" (in EN). Optica 8 (2): 122–129. doi:10.1364/OPTICA.411007. ISSN 2334-2536. Bibcode: 2021Optic...8..122B. https://www.osapublishing.org/optica/abstract.cfm?uri=optica-8-2-122.
- ↑ Trisnadi, Jahja I. (2002). "Speckle contrast reduction in laser projection displays". in Wu, Ming H. Projection Displays VIII. 4657. pp. 131–137. doi:10.1117/12.463781.
- ↑ "Despeckler". https://www.fiberguide.com/product/despeckler/.
- ↑ Chellappan, Kishore V.; Erden, Erdem; Urey, Hakan (2010). "Laser-based displays: A review". Applied Optics 49 (25): F79–98. doi:10.1364/ao.49.000f79. PMID 20820205. Bibcode: 2010ApOpt..49F..79C.
- ↑ Argenti, F.; Lapini, A.; Bianchi, T.; Alparone, L. (September 2013). "A Tutorial on Speckle Reduction in Synthetic Aperture Radar Images". IEEE Geoscience and Remote Sensing Magazine 1 (3): 6–35. doi:10.1109/MGRS.2013.2277512. http://porto.polito.it/2515888/1/GRS_Mag_11_polito.pdf.
- ↑ Piero Zamperoni (1995). "Image Enhancement". in Peter W. Hawkes. Advances in imaging and electron physics. 92. Academic Press. pp. 13. ISBN 9780120147342.
- ↑ 38.0 38.1 M. Forouzanfar, H. Abrishami-Moghaddam, and M. Gity, "A new multiscale Bayesian algorithm for speckle reduction in medical ultrasound images," Signal, Image and Video Processing, Springer, vol. 4, pp. 359-75, Sep. 2010
- ↑ Mallat, S.: A Wavelet Tour of Signal Processing. Academic Press, London (1998)
- ↑ Argenti, F.; Bianchi, T.; Lapini, A.; Alparone, L. (January 2012). "Fast MAP Despeckling Based on Laplacian–Gaussian Modeling of Wavelet Coefficients". IEEE Geoscience and Remote Sensing Letters 9 (1): 13–17. doi:10.1109/LGRS.2011.2158798. Bibcode: 2012IGRSL...9...13A. http://porto.polito.it/2505887/.
- ↑ Garcia-Ruiz, Andres (2016). "Speckle Analysis Method for Distributed Detection of Temperature Gradients With Φ OTDR". IEEE Photonics Technology Letters 28 (18): 2000. doi:10.1109/LPT.2016.2578043. Bibcode: 2016IPTL...28.2000G. https://zenodo.org/record/894688.
- ↑ Nye, J. F.; Berry, M. V. (1974). "Dislocations in Wave Trains". Proceedings of the Royal Society A 336 (1605): 165–190. doi:10.1098/rspa.1974.0012. Bibcode: 1974RSPSA.336..165N.
- ↑ Optical Angular Momentum
- ↑ Okulov, A. Yu. (2008). "Optical and sound helical structures in a Mandelstam-Brillouin mirror". JETP Letters 88 (8): 487–491. doi:10.1134/S0021364008200046. Bibcode: 2008JETPL..88..487O.
- ↑ Okulov, A Yu (2008). "Angular momentum of photons and phase conjugation". Journal of Physics B 41 (10): 101001. doi:10.1088/0953-4075/41/10/101001. Bibcode: 2008JPhB...41j1001O.
- ↑ Okulov, A. Yu (2009). "Twisted speckle entities inside wave-front reversal mirrors". Physical Review A 80 (1): 013837. doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.80.013837. Bibcode: 2009PhRvA..80a3837O.
Further reading
- Cheng Hua; Tian Jinwen (2009). "Speckle Reduction of Synthetic Aperture Radar Images Based on Fuzzy Logic". 1. pp. 933–937. doi:10.1109/ETCS.2009.212.
- Forouzanfar, M., Abrishami-Moghaddam, H., and Dehghani, M., (2007) "Speckle reduction in medical ultrasound images using a new multiscale bivariate Bayesian MMSE-based method," IEEE 15th Signal Processing and Communication Applications Conf. (SIU'07), Turkey, June 2007, pp. 1–4.
- Sedef Kent; Osman Nuri Oçan; Tolga Ensari (2004). "Speckle Reduction of Synthetic Aperture Radar Images Using Wavelet Filtering". in ITG. Margret Schneider. pp. 1001–1003. ISBN 9783800728282.
- Andrew K. Chan; Cheng Peng (2003). "Wavelet applications to the processing of SAR images". Wavelets for sensing technologies. Artech House remote sensing library. Artech House. ISBN 9781580533171.
- Jong-Sen Lee; Eric Pottier (2009). "Polarimetric SAR speckle filtering". Polarimetric Radar Imaging: From Basics to Applications. Optical science and engineering series. 142. CRC Press. ISBN 9781420054972.
External links
- Seeing speckle in your fingernail
- Research group on light scattering and photonic materials
- Brogioli, Doriano; Vailati, Alberto; Giglio, Marzio (2009). "Near Field Speckles". arXiv:0907.3376 [physics.optics].
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speckle (interference).
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