Scattering medium: randomly packed pinhole cameras
Honglin Liu, Xin Wang, Puxiang Lai, Zhentao Liu, Jianhong Shi and, Shensheng Han

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel perspective viewing scattering media as an assembly of randomly packed pinhole cameras, enabling quantitative localization and profiling of targets through speckle pattern analysis, which surpasses existing methods.
Contribution
It conceptualizes scattering media as a superposition of pinhole images, providing a new approach to localize and profile targets behind scattering media using speckle patterns.
Findings
Speckle patterns are superpositions of shifted pinhole images.
The method enables target localization and profiling through scattering media.
It offers insights into diffusive light phenomena and limitations of current techniques.
Abstract
When light travels through scattering media, speckles (spatially random distribution of fluctuated intensities) are formed due to the interference of light travelling along different optical paths, preventing the perception of structure, absolute location and dimension of a target within or on the other side of the medium. Currently, the prevailing techniques such as wavefront shaping, optical phase conjugation, scattering matrix measurement, and speckle autocorrelation imaging can only picture the target structure in the absence of prior information. Here we show that a scattering medium can be conceptualized as an assembly of randomly packed pinhole cameras, and the corresponding speckle pattern is a superposition of randomly shifted pinhole images. This provides a new perspective to bridge target, scattering medium, and speckle pattern, allowing one to localize and profile a target…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSurface Roughness and Optical Measurements · Random lasers and scattering media · Advanced Optical Imaging Technologies
