
- Advanced Photonics
- Vol. 5, Issue 4, 040502 (2023)
Abstract
Hyperspectral imaging (HSI), with the unique capability to discriminate various components by spatiospectral resolvability, is a powerful tool for observation and inspection, which has been applied in numerous fields, ranging from remote sensing,1 archaeology,2 food safety,3 and forensic medicine,4 to pharmaceutical research5 and clinical diagnosis.6 To acquire three-dimensional (3D) information
As reported recently in Advanced Photonics Nexus, a group led by Kotaro Hiramatsu from University of Tokyo proposed a framework to improve the spectral image acquisition rate of HSI by integrating time-domain HSI and compressed sensing.8 Instead of measuring the spatiospectral information
Figure 1.Schematic of hyperspectral imaging by compressive sensing in the temporal domain. Black arrow indicates the reconstruction from sparsely sampled spatiotemporal data to hyperspectral images.
Exploiting the mapping between the temporal and spectral information by Fourier transform, sparse sampling in the temporal domain can be utilized to extract the corresponding spectral signal. By incorporating compressive sensing in temporal domain into hyperspectral imaging, an accelerated hyperspectral imaging framework is achieved. Hyperspectral images with high fidelity can be recovered by a posterior reconstruction algorithm with the spatiospectral total variation priors. This work provides a new perspective for information acquisition in hyperspectral imaging, and offers a feasible strategy to greatly accelerate 3D signal acquisition. The proposed method can also be further extended to other time-domain HSI methods, such as Fourier transform infrared and Fourier transform two-photon imaging. What’s more, 4D information acquisition
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Shian Zhang is an expert in ultrafast optical imaging. He is a professor and the deputy director of the State Key Laboratory of Precision Spectroscopy, East China Normal University (ECNU), China. He received his PhD in optics from ECNU in 2006. His current research interests focus on ultrafast optical imaging, multidimensional imaging, and high-speed super-resolution microscopy.

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