Effect of Finite-Sized Optical Components and Pixels on Light-Field Imaging through Correlated Light

Sensors (Basel). 2022 Apr 5;22(7):2778. doi: 10.3390/s22072778.

Abstract

Diffraction-limited light-field imaging has been recently achieved by exploiting light spatial correlations measured on two high-resolution detectors. As in conventional light-field imaging, the typical operations of refocusing and 3D reconstruction are based on ray tracing in a geometrical optics context, and are thus well defined in the ideal case, both conceptually and theoretically. However, some properties of the measured correlation function are influenced by experimental features such as the finite size of apertures, detectors, and pixels. In this work, we take into account realistic experimental conditions and analyze the resulting correlation function through theory and simulation. We also provide an expression to evaluate the pixel-limited resolution of the refocused images, as well as a strategy for eliminating artifacts introduced by the finite size of the optical elements.

Keywords: 3D imaging; correlation imaging; light-field imaging; quantum imaging.