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Development of a fast calibration method for image mapping spectrometry.

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An image mapping spectrometer (IMS) is a snapshot hyperspectral imager that simultaneously captures both the spatial (x, y) and spectral (λ) information of incoming light. The IMS maps a three-dimensional… Click to show full abstract

An image mapping spectrometer (IMS) is a snapshot hyperspectral imager that simultaneously captures both the spatial (x, y) and spectral (λ) information of incoming light. The IMS maps a three-dimensional (3D) datacube (x, y, λ) to a two-dimensional (2D) detector array (x, y) for parallel measurement. To reconstruct the original 3D datacube, one must construct a lookup table that connects voxels in the datacube and pixels in the raw image. Previous calibration methods suffer from either low speed or poor image quality. We herein present a slit-scan calibration method that can significantly reduce the calibration time while maintaining high accuracy. Moreover, we quantitatively analyzed the major artifact in the IMS, the striped image, and developed three numerical methods to correct for it.

Keywords: image mapping; image; calibration method; calibration; development fast

Journal Title: Applied optics
Year Published: 2020

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