Mid-IR hyperspectral imaging with undetected photons
Marlon Placke, Chiara Lindner, Felix Mann, Inna Kviatkovsky, Helen M. Chrzanowski, Hendrik Bartolomaeus, Frank K\"uhnemann, and Sven Ramelow

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a cost-effective, high-resolution mid-infrared hyperspectral imaging technique using undetected photons and quantum Fourier transform spectroscopy, enabling detailed environmental and biomedical analysis.
Contribution
It introduces a novel nonlinear interferometer setup for mid-IR hyperspectral imaging that overcomes traditional camera and source limitations.
Findings
Achieved hyperspectral imaging over 2300-3100 cm$^{-1}$ range
Resolved 3500 spatial modes with 10 cm$^{-1}$ spectral resolution
Utilized a commercial sCMOS camera and a compact pump laser
Abstract
Sensing with undetected photons has become a vibrant, application-driven research domain with a special focus on the mid-infrared (mid-IR) wavelength region. Since the mid-IR contains spectral bands with highly specific and strong molecular absorbance signatures, often referred to as fingerprints, a multitude of different samples and their compositions can be detected and quantified spectroscopically. Enhancing this inherently sample alteration-free spectroscopic method with imaging capabilities leads to a powerful technique for environmental monitoring and biomedical applications that enables automated diagnostics while omitting time-consuming and non-reversible labeling steps. To evade the shortcomings of state-of-the-art instruments for mid-IR hyperspectral microscopy related to cost, complexity, power-consumption, and performance, which are associated with technological challenges…
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