A traditional limitation of holographic displays has been their image quality. Recent advances in computer-generated holography using a camera-in-the-loop (CITL) approach have demonstrated that these issues can be overcome to improve image-fidelity by treating the system as a negative feedback control loop.
Such an approach demands high bit-depth camera sensors to realise high system bandwidth. Here, we explore boosting the dynamic-range of a given imaging sensor by using a spatially varying exposure (SVE) approach. The exposure levels of adjacent pixels are spatially-multiplexed using an appropriate optical mask and the full image reconstructed from the sampled SVE image, resulting in a boosted dynamic-range with only a small sacrifice in resolution.
This technique is well-tailored to CITL requirements as it promises to boost the dynamic range of the imaging sensor in a single image acquisition. We present our findings on the viability of this approach within the context of CGH displays.
Phase and polarization of coherent light are highly perturbed by interaction with microstructural changes in premalignant tissue, holding promise for label-free detection of early tumors in endoscopically accessible tissues such as the gastrointestinal tract. Flexible optical multicore fiber (MCF) bundles used in conventional diagnostic endoscopy and endomicroscopy scramble phase and polarization, restricting clinicians instead to low-contrast amplitude-only imaging. We apply a transmission matrix characterization approach to produce full-field
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