Increase the frame rate of a camera via temporal ghost imaging

Abstract

Computational temporal ghost imaging (CTGI) allows the reconstruction of a fast signal from a two dimensional detection with no temporal resolution. High speed spatial modulation is implemented to encode temporal detail of the signal into the two dimensional detection. By calculating the correlation between the modulation and the rendered image, the temporal information can be retrieved. CTGI indicates a way to detect high speed non-reproducible signal from a slow detector. Based on CTGI, we propose an innovative scheme that can increase the frame rate of a camera by resolving the temporal detail of every camera image. To achieve this, CTGI is conducted parallelly to different areas of the scene. High speed spatial multiplexed modulation is performed, constraining the continuous scene into a series of short-time-scale frames. All the modulated frames are accumulated into one image that is eventually used in the correlation retrieval process. By performing CTGI reconstruction on each area independently, the temporal detail of the whole scene can be obtained. This method can have a strong application in ultrafast imaging.

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