English

FlatCam: Thin, Bare-Sensor Cameras using Coded Aperture and Computation

Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition 2016-01-28 v2

Abstract

FlatCam is a thin form-factor lensless camera that consists of a coded mask placed on top of a bare, conventional sensor array. Unlike a traditional, lens-based camera where an image of the scene is directly recorded on the sensor pixels, each pixel in FlatCam records a linear combination of light from multiple scene elements. A computational algorithm is then used to demultiplex the recorded measurements and reconstruct an image of the scene. FlatCam is an instance of a coded aperture imaging system; however, unlike the vast majority of related work, we place the coded mask extremely close to the image sensor that can enable a thin system. We employ a separable mask to ensure that both calibration and image reconstruction are scalable in terms of memory requirements and computational complexity. We demonstrate the potential of the FlatCam design using two prototypes: one at visible wavelengths and one at infrared wavelengths.

Cite

@article{arxiv.1509.00116,
  title  = {FlatCam: Thin, Bare-Sensor Cameras using Coded Aperture and Computation},
  author = {M. Salman Asif and Ali Ayremlou and Aswin Sankaranarayanan and Ashok Veeraraghavan and Richard Baraniuk},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1509.00116},
  year   = {2016}
}

Comments

12 pages, 10 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-22T10:45:58.082Z