1 April 2010 Focused plenoptic camera and rendering
Todor G. Georgiev, Andrew Lumsdaine
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Plenoptic cameras, constructed with internal microlens arrays, capture both spatial and angular information, i.e., the full 4-D radiance, of a scene. The design of traditional plenoptic cameras assumes that each microlens image is completely defocused with respect to the image created by the main camera lens. As a result, only a single pixel in the final image is rendered from each microlens image, resulting in disappointingly low resolution. A recently developed alternative approach based on the focused plenoptic camera uses the microlens array as an imaging system focused on the image plane of the main camera lens. The flexible spatioangular trade-off that becomes available with this design enables rendering of final images with significantly higher resolution than those from traditional plenoptic cameras. We analyze the focused plenoptic camera in optical phase space and present basic, blended, and depth-based rendering algorithms for producing high-quality, high-resolution images. We also present our graphics-processing-unit-based implementations of these algorithms, which are able to render full screen refocused images in real time.
©(2010) Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE)
Todor G. Georgiev and Andrew Lumsdaine "Focused plenoptic camera and rendering," Journal of Electronic Imaging 19(2), 021106 (1 April 2010). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.3442712
Published: 1 April 2010
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CITATIONS
Cited by 238 scholarly publications and 11 patents.
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KEYWORDS
Cameras

Microlens

Sensors

Image resolution

Microlens array

Image sensors

Algorithm development

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