Physics:Light-in-flight imaging

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File:Single-photon sensitive light-in-fight imaging.webm File:Apparent superluminal light-in-flight observation captured with megapixel SPAD camera.webm Light-in-flight imaging — a set of techniques to visualize propagation of light through different media.

History and techniques

Light was first captured in its flight by N. Abramson in 1978,[3] who used a holographic technique to record the wavefront of a pulse propagating and being scattered by a white-painted screen placed in its path. This high-speed recording technique allowed the dynamic observation of light phenomena like reflection, interference and focusing that are normally observed statically.[4][5] More recently, light-in-flight holography has been performed in a scattering medium rather than using a reflective screen.[6][7] Light can also be captured in motion in a scattering medium using a streak camera that has picosecond temporal resolution, thus removing the need for interferometry and coherent illumination but requires additional hardware to raster scan the two-dimensional (2D) scene, which increases the acquisition time to hours.[8][9] A few other techniques possess the temporal resolution to observe light in motion as it illuminates a scene, such as photonic mixer devices based on modulated illumination, albeit with a temporal resolution limited to a few nanoseconds.[10] Alternatively, time-encoded amplified imaging can record images at the repetition rate of a laser by exploiting wavelength-encoded illumination of a scene and amplified detection through a dispersive fibre, albeit with 160 ns temporal and spatial resolution.[11] Recent studies based on computer tomography using data from multiple probe pulses enabled reconstruction of picosecond pulse propagation phenomena in condensed media.[12] In 2015 a method to visualize events evolving on picosecond time scales based on single-photon detector arrays has been demonstrated.[1]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Gariepy, Genevieve; Krstajić, Nikola; Henderson, Robert; Li, Chunyong; Thomson, Robert R.; Buller, Gerald S.; Heshmat, Barmak; Raskar, Ramesh et al. (2015-01-27). "Single-photon sensitive light-in-fight imaging". Nature Communications (Springer Science and Business Media LLC) 6 (1): 6021. doi:10.1038/ncomms7021. ISSN 2041-1723. 
  2. Morimoto, Kazuhiro; Wu, Ming-Lo; Ardelean, Andrei; Charbon, Edoardo (2021-01-08). "Superluminal Motion-Assisted Four-Dimensional Light-in-Flight Imaging". Physical Review X (American Physical Society (APS)) 11 (1): 011005. doi:10.1103/physrevx.11.011005. ISSN 2160-3308. 
  3. Abramson, Nils (1978-10-01). "Light-in-flight recording by holography". Optics Letters (The Optical Society) 3 (4): 121-123. doi:10.1364/ol.3.000121. ISSN 0146-9592. 
  4. Abramson, Nils (1983-01-15). "Light-in-flight recording: high-speed holographic motion pictures of ultrafast phenomena". Applied Optics (The Optical Society) 22 (2): 215-232. doi:10.1364/ao.22.000215. ISSN 0003-6935. 
  5. Abramson, Nils H.; Spears, Kenneth G. (1989-05-15). "Single pulse light-in-flight recording by holography". Applied Optics (The Optical Society) 28 (10): 1834-1841. doi:10.1364/ao.28.001834. ISSN 0003-6935. 
  6. Häusler, G.; Herrmann, J. M.; Kummer, R.; Lindner, M. W. (1996-07-15). "Observation of light propagation in volume scatterers with 10^11-fold slow motion". Optics Letters (The Optical Society) 21 (14): 1087-1089. doi:10.1364/ol.21.001087. ISSN 0146-9592. 
  7. Kubota, Toshihiro; Komai, Kazunari; Yamagiwa, Masatomo; Awatsuji, Yasuhiro (2007-10-16). "Moving picture recording and observation of three-dimensional image of femtosecond light pulse propagation". Optics Express (The Optical Society) 15 (22): 14348-14354. doi:10.1364/oe.15.014348. ISSN 1094-4087. 
  8. Velten, A. et al. Femto-photography: capturing and visualizing the propagation of light. ACM Trans. Graph 32, 44:1–44:8 (2013).
  9. Velten, Andreas; Lawson, Everett; Bardagjy, Andrew; Bawendi, Moungi; Raskar, Ramesh (2011). "Slow art with a trillion frames per second camera". Proceedings of SIGGRAPH. 44. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press. doi:10.1145/2037715.2037730. 
  10. Heide, F., Hullin, M. B., Gregson, J. & Heidrich, W. Low-budget transient imaging using photonic mixer devices. ACM Trans. Graph 32, 45:1–45:10 (2013).
  11. Goda, K.; Tsia, K. K.; Jalali, B. (2009). "Serial time-encoded amplified imaging for real-time observation of fast dynamic phenomena". Nature (Springer Science and Business Media LLC) 458 (7242): 1145–1149. doi:10.1038/nature07980. ISSN 0028-0836. 
  12. Li, Zhengyan; Zgadzaj, Rafal; Wang, Xiaoming; Chang, Yen-Yu; Downer, Michael C. (2014-01-22). "Single-shot tomographic movies of evolving light-velocity objects". Nature Communications (Springer Science and Business Media LLC) 5 (1): 3085. doi:10.1038/ncomms4085. ISSN 2041-1723.