Superresolution without Separation
Abstract
This paper provides a theoretical analysis of diffraction-limited superresolution, demonstrating that arbitrarily close point sources can be resolved in ideal situations. Precisely, we assume that the incoming signal is a linear combination of M shifted copies of a known waveform with unknown shifts and amplitudes, and one only observes a finite collection of evaluations of this signal. We characterize properties of the base waveform such that the exact translations and amplitudes can be recovered from 2M + 1 observations. This recovery is achieved by solving a a weighted version of basis pursuit over a continuous dictionary. Our methods combine classical polynomial interpolation techniques with contemporary tools from compressed sensing.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1506.03144,
title = {Superresolution without Separation},
author = {Geoffrey Schiebinger and Elina Robeva and Benjamin Recht},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1506.03144},
year = {2015}
}
Comments
23 pages, 8 figures