English

Super-resolution imaging based on active optical intensity interferometry

Optics 2024-04-25 v1 Quantum Physics

Abstract

Long baseline diffraction-limited optical aperture synthesis technology by interferometry plays an important role in scientific study and practical application. In contrast to amplitude (phase) interferometry, intensity interferometry -- which exploits the quantum nature of light to measure the photon bunching effect in thermal light -- is robust against atmospheric turbulence and optical defects. However, a thermal light source typically has a significant divergence angle and a low average photon number per mode, forestalling the applicability over long ranges. Here, we propose and demonstrate active intensity interferometry for super-resolution imaging over the kilometer range. Our scheme exploits phase-independent multiple laser emitters to produce the thermal illumination and uses an elaborate computational algorithm to reconstruct the image. In outdoor environments, we image two-dimension millimeter-level targets over 1.36 kilometers at a resolution of 14 times the diffraction limit of a single telescope. High-resolution optical imaging and sensing are anticipated by applying long-baseline active intensity interferometry in general branches of physics and metrology.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2404.15685,
  title  = {Super-resolution imaging based on active optical intensity interferometry},
  author = {Lu-Chuan Liu and Cheng Wu and Wei Li and Yu-Ao Chen and Frank Wilczek and Xiao-Peng Shao and Feihu Xu and Qiang Zhang and Jian-Wei Pan},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2404.15685},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

42 pages, 11 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-28T16:04:47.094Z