Signal detection in turbid water using temporally encoded polarimetric integral imaging

2020 
To improve signal detection in a turbid medium, we propose temporally encoded single shot polarimetric integral imaging. An optical signal is temporally encoded using gold coded sequences and transmitted through a turbid medium. The encoded signals are captured as a sequence of elemental images by two orthogonal polarized image sensor arrays. Polarimetric and polarization difference imaging are used to suppress the partially polarized and unpolarized background noise such that only the polarized ballistic signal photons are captured at the sensor. Multidimensional integral imaging is used to obtain 4D reconstructed data, and multidimensional nonlinear correlation is performed on the reconstructed data to detect the optical signal. We compare the effectiveness of the proposed polarimetric underwater optical signal detection approach to conventional (non-polarimetric) integral imaging-based and 2D imaging-based signal detection systems. The underwater signal detection capabilities are measured through performance metrics such as receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves, the area under the curve (AUC), and the number of detection errors. Furthermore, statistical measures, including the Kullback-Leibler divergence, signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), and peak-to-correlation energy (PCE), are also calculated to show the improved performance of the proposed system. Our experimental results show that the proposed polarimetric integral-imaging approach significantly outperforms the conventional imaging-based methods. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report on temporally encoded single shot polarimetric integral imaging for signal detection in turbid water.
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