Paper
23 May 2014 Experimental study of super-resolution using a compressive sensing architecture
J. Christopher Flake, Gary Euliss, John B. Greer, Stephanie Shubert, Glenn Easley, Kevin Gemp, Brian Baptista, Michael D. Stenner, Phil A. Sallee
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
An experimental investigation of super-resolution imaging from measurements of projections onto a random basis is presented. In particular, a laboratory imaging system was constructed following an architecture that has become familiar from the theory of compressive sensing. The system uses a digital micromirror array located at an intermediate image plane to introduce binary matrices that represent members of a basis set. The system model was developed from experimentally acquired calibration data which characterizes the system output corresponding to each individual mirror in the array. Images are reconstructed at a resolution limited by that of the micromirror array using the split Bregman approach to total-variation regularized optimization. System performance is evaluated qualitatively as a function of the size of the basis set, or equivalently, the number of snapshots applied in the reconstruction.
© (2014) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
J. Christopher Flake, Gary Euliss, John B. Greer, Stephanie Shubert, Glenn Easley, Kevin Gemp, Brian Baptista, Michael D. Stenner, and Phil A. Sallee "Experimental study of super-resolution using a compressive sensing architecture", Proc. SPIE 9109, Compressive Sensing III, 91090F (23 May 2014); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2050887
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Cited by 3 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Digital micromirror devices

Super resolution

Mirrors

Image resolution

Compressed sensing

Binary data

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