STORM

Abstract: Image sensors that can measure the time of travel of photons are gaining importance in a myriad of applications such as LIDAR, non-line of sight imaging, light-in-flight imaging, and imaging through scattering media. While the price of these sensors is dramatically shrinking, there remains a trade-off between spatial resolution and temporal resolution. While single-pixel detectors using the single photon avalanche diode (SPAD) technology can achieve 10-30 ps time resolution, the current generation array detectors can only produce an order of magnitude lower temporal resolution due to space-related fabrication constraints. Moreover, this limit is due to bandwidth, read-out and circuit-area constraints on the detector array and therefore unlikely to dramatically change in the next few years.In this paper, we demonstrate a computational imaging approach that utilizes multiple measurements with calibrated sub-temporal resolution delays on the illumination pulse and super-resolution post-processing algorithms that together can achieve an order of magnitude improvement in the time resolution of the acquired transients. We build an experimental prototype, using a 32 × 32 SPAD detector array with 400ps time resolution and demonstrate recovery of transients with ≈ 50ps time resolution, an 8× improvement in time resolution resulting in a 5× improvement in depth reconstruction error.

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