Quanta Burst Photography
Sizhuo Ma, Shantanu Gupta, Arin C. Ulku, Claudio Bruschini, Edoardo, Charbon, Mohit Gupta

TL;DR
Quanta burst photography uses large SPAD arrays to capture and computationally process ultra low-light and fast-moving scenes into high-quality images with minimal noise and artifacts.
Contribution
This paper introduces a novel computational photography technique that leverages large SPAD arrays for high-quality imaging in challenging conditions, combining alignment, merging, and analysis.
Findings
Effective in ultra low-light conditions
Reduces motion blur and artifacts
Enhances dynamic range and SNR
Abstract
Single-photon avalanche diodes (SPADs) are an emerging sensor technology capable of detecting individual incident photons, and capturing their time-of-arrival with high timing precision. While these sensors were limited to single-pixel or low-resolution devices in the past, recently, large (up to 1 MPixel) SPAD arrays have been developed. These single-photon cameras (SPCs) are capable of capturing high-speed sequences of binary single-photon images with no read noise. We present quanta burst photography, a computational photography technique that leverages SPCs as passive imaging devices for photography in challenging conditions, including ultra low-light and fast motion. Inspired by recent success of conventional burst photography, we design algorithms that align and merge binary sequences captured by SPCs into intensity images with minimal motion blur and artifacts, high…
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