Abstract
For previous three-dimensional ghost imaging, the acquisition of absolute distance information is mainly based on the principle of time-of-flight, which usually needs lots of measurements and a large detection/modulation bandwidth product. Here we present a technique called three-dimensional ghost imaging via the Scheimpflug detection (3D-GISD), which exploits the principle of a similar binocular stereoscopic vision for distance information acquisition and can dramatically reduce the measurements required for high-quality 3D image reconstruction. The experimental results demonstrate that high-quality 3D-GISD can be still obtained even if the target exceeds the depth of field of Scheimpflug imaging system and less than 500 measurements are adopted for an image with 128×128 pixels. What’s more, the ranging accuracy of 0.2 mm can be achieved by 3D-GISD at about 1.1 m detection distance for a real scenario. Factors influencing the accuracy of distance measurement for 3D-GISD are also discussed.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Key Lab of Advanced Optical Manufacturing Technologies of Jiangsu Province
Natural Science Research of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions of China