Affiliation:
1. University College London
2. The University of Nottingham
Abstract
We have previously demonstrated a novel interferometric multispeckle Fourier domain diffuse correlation spectroscopy system that makes use of holographic camera-based detection, and which is capable of making in vivo pulsatile flow measurements. In this work, we report on a systematic characterisation of the signal-to-noise ratio performance of our system. This includes demonstration and elimination of laser mode hopping, and correction for the instrument’s modulation transfer function to ensure faithful reconstruction of measured intensity profiles. We also demonstrate a singular value decomposition approach to ensure that spatiotemporally correlated experimental noise sources do not limit optimal signal-to-noise ratio performance. Finally, we present a novel multispeckle denoising algorithm that allows our instrument to achieve a signal-to-noise ratio gain that is equal to the square root of the number of detected speckles, whilst detecting up to ∼1290 speckles in parallel. The signal-to-noise ratio gain of 36 that we report is a significant step toward mitigating the trade-off that exists between signal-to-noise ratio and imaging depth in diffuse correlation spectroscopy.
Funder
Royal Society
Royal Academy of Engineering
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
EPSRC-funded UCL Centre for Doctoral Training in Medical Imaging
Subject
Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics,Biotechnology