Mid-infrared single-pixel imaging at the single-photon level.
Yinqi WangKun HuangJianan FangMing YanE WuHeping ZengPublished in: Nature communications (2023)
Single-pixel cameras have recently emerged as promising alternatives to multi-pixel sensors due to reduced costs and superior durability, which are particularly attractive for mid-infrared (MIR) imaging pertinent to applications including industry inspection and biomedical diagnosis. To date, MIR single-pixel photon-sparse imaging has yet been realized, which urgently calls for high-sensitivity optical detectors and high-fidelity spatial modulators. Here, we demonstrate a MIR single-photon computational imaging with a single-element silicon detector. The underlying methodology relies on nonlinear structured detection, where encoded time-varying pump patterns are optically imprinted onto a MIR object image through sum-frequency generation. Simultaneously, the MIR radiation is spectrally translated into the visible region, thus permitting infrared single-photon upconversion detection. Then, the use of advanced algorithms of compressed sensing and deep learning allows us to reconstruct MIR images under sub-Nyquist sampling and photon-starving illumination. The presented paradigm of single-pixel upconversion imaging is featured with single-pixel simplicity, single-photon sensitivity, and room-temperature operation, which would establish a new path for sensitive imaging at longer infrared wavelengths or terahertz frequencies, where high-sensitivity photon counters and high-fidelity spatial modulators are typically hard to access.
Keyphrases
- high resolution
- cell proliferation
- long non coding rna
- deep learning
- long noncoding rna
- room temperature
- photodynamic therapy
- small molecule
- radiation therapy
- magnetic resonance imaging
- computed tomography
- magnetic resonance
- mass spectrometry
- living cells
- optical coherence tomography
- working memory
- liquid chromatography