Optimal design of hybrid optical digital imaging systems

Several types of pupil modulation have been reported to decrease the aberration variance of the modulation-transfer-function (MTF) in aberration-tolerant hybrid optical-digital imaging systems. It is common to enforce restorability constraints on the MTF, requiring trade of aberration-tolerance and...

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Main Author: Vettenburg, Tom
Other Authors: Harvey, Andrew R.
Published: Heriot-Watt University 2010
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Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.575207
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5752072016-12-08T03:19:36ZOptimal design of hybrid optical digital imaging systemsVettenburg, TomHarvey, Andrew R.2010Several types of pupil modulation have been reported to decrease the aberration variance of the modulation-transfer-function (MTF) in aberration-tolerant hybrid optical-digital imaging systems. It is common to enforce restorability constraints on the MTF, requiring trade of aberration-tolerance and noise-gain. In this thesis, instead of optimising specific MTF characteristics, the expected imaging-error of the joint design is minimised directly. This method is used to compare commonly used phase-modulation functions. The analysis shows how optimal imaging performance is obtained using moderate phasemodulation, and more importantly, it shows the relative merits of different functions. It is shown that the technique is readily integrable with off-the-shelf optical design software, which is demonstrated with the optimisation of a wide-angle reflective system with significant off-axis aberrations. The imaging error can also be minimised for amplitudeonly masks. It is shown that phase aberrations in an imaging system can be mitigated using binary amplitude masks. This offers a low-cost, transmission-mode alternative to phase correction as used in active and adaptive optics. More efficient masks can be obtained by the optimisation of the imaging fidelity.621.36Heriot-Watt Universityhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.575207http://hdl.handle.net/10399/2438Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 621.36
spellingShingle 621.36
Vettenburg, Tom
Optimal design of hybrid optical digital imaging systems
description Several types of pupil modulation have been reported to decrease the aberration variance of the modulation-transfer-function (MTF) in aberration-tolerant hybrid optical-digital imaging systems. It is common to enforce restorability constraints on the MTF, requiring trade of aberration-tolerance and noise-gain. In this thesis, instead of optimising specific MTF characteristics, the expected imaging-error of the joint design is minimised directly. This method is used to compare commonly used phase-modulation functions. The analysis shows how optimal imaging performance is obtained using moderate phasemodulation, and more importantly, it shows the relative merits of different functions. It is shown that the technique is readily integrable with off-the-shelf optical design software, which is demonstrated with the optimisation of a wide-angle reflective system with significant off-axis aberrations. The imaging error can also be minimised for amplitudeonly masks. It is shown that phase aberrations in an imaging system can be mitigated using binary amplitude masks. This offers a low-cost, transmission-mode alternative to phase correction as used in active and adaptive optics. More efficient masks can be obtained by the optimisation of the imaging fidelity.
author2 Harvey, Andrew R.
author_facet Harvey, Andrew R.
Vettenburg, Tom
author Vettenburg, Tom
author_sort Vettenburg, Tom
title Optimal design of hybrid optical digital imaging systems
title_short Optimal design of hybrid optical digital imaging systems
title_full Optimal design of hybrid optical digital imaging systems
title_fullStr Optimal design of hybrid optical digital imaging systems
title_full_unstemmed Optimal design of hybrid optical digital imaging systems
title_sort optimal design of hybrid optical digital imaging systems
publisher Heriot-Watt University
publishDate 2010
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.575207
work_keys_str_mv AT vettenburgtom optimaldesignofhybridopticaldigitalimagingsystems
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