Super-resolution Orthogonal Deterministic Imaging Technique for Terahertz Subwavelength Microscopy
Hichem Guerboukha, Yang Cao, Kathirvel Nallappan, and Maksim, Skorobogatiy

TL;DR
This paper introduces SODI, a super-resolution imaging method for terahertz microscopy that uses designed masks to enhance resolution with minimal frames, inspired by super-resolution techniques in visible light.
Contribution
The paper develops a novel super-resolution technique for THz imaging using artificial masks, achieving higher resolution with fewer frames than existing methods.
Findings
Experimental second-order resolution enhancement with 8 frames
Theoretical extension to higher-order resolution improvements
Method adaptable to existing THz imaging systems
Abstract
Terahertz subwavelength imaging aims at developing THz microscopes able to resolve deeply subwavelength features. To improve the spatial resolution beyond the diffraction limit, a current trend is to use various subwavelength probes to convert the near-field to the far-field. These techniques, while offering significant gains in spatial resolution, inherently lack the ability to rapidly obtain THz images due to the necessity of slow pixel-by-pixel raster scan and often suffer from low light throughput. In parallel, in the visible spectral range, several super-resolution imaging techniques were developed that enhance the image resolution by recording and statistically correlating multiple images of an object backlit with light from stochastically blinking fluorophores. Inspired by this methodology, we develop a Super-resolution Orthogonal Deterministic Imaging (SODI) technique and apply…
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