Non-invasive single-shot imaging through scattering layers and around corners via speckle correlations

Optical imaging through and inside complex samples is a difficult challenge with important applications in many fields. The fundamental problem is that inhomogeneous samples such as biological tissue randomly scatter and diffuse light, preventing the formation of diffraction-limited images. Despite...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature photonics 2014-10, Vol.8 (10), p.784-790
Hauptverfasser: Katz, Ori, Heidmann, Pierre, Fink, Mathias, Gigan, Sylvain
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Optical imaging through and inside complex samples is a difficult challenge with important applications in many fields. The fundamental problem is that inhomogeneous samples such as biological tissue randomly scatter and diffuse light, preventing the formation of diffraction-limited images. Despite many recent advances, no current method can perform non-invasive imaging in real-time using diffused light. Here, we show that, owing to the ‘memory-effect’ for speckle correlations, a single high-resolution image of the scattered light, captured with a standard camera, encodes sufficient information to image through visually opaque layers and around corners with diffraction-limited resolution. We experimentally demonstrate single-shot imaging through scattering media and around corners using spatially incoherent light and various samples, from white paint to dynamic biological samples. Our single-shot lensless technique is simple, does not require wavefront-shaping nor time-gated or interferometric detection, and is realized here using a camera-phone. It has the potential to enable imaging in currently inaccessible scenarios. Diffraction-limited imaging in a variety of complex media is realized based on analysis of speckle correlations in light captured using a camera phone.
ISSN:1749-4885
1749-4893
DOI:10.1038/nphoton.2014.189