Image Formation: Optics and Imagers - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Image Formation: Optics and Imagers

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Pinhole camera. Lenses. Focus, aperture, distortion. Pinhole. Object ... Q: What does field of view of camera depend on? Focal length of lens. Size of imager ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Image Formation: Optics and Imagers


1
Image FormationOptics and Imagers
Real world
Optics
Sensor
Acknowledgment some figures by B. Curless, E.
Hecht, W.J. Smith, B.K.P. Horn, and A. Theuwissen
2
Optics
  • Pinhole camera
  • Lenses
  • Focus, aperture, distortion

3
Pinhole Camera
  • Camera obscura known since antiquity

4
Pinhole Camera
  • Camera obscura known since antiquity
  • First recording in 1826 onto a pewterplate (by
    Joseph Nicéphore Niepce)

Pinhole camera
5
Pinhole Camera Limitations
  • Aperture too big blurry image
  • Aperture too small requires long exposure or
    high intensity
  • Aperture much too small diffraction through
    pinhole ? blurry image

6
Lenses
  • Focus a bundle of rays from a scene point onto a
    single point on the imager
  • Result can make aperture bigger

7
Ideal Lenses
  • Thin-lens approximation
  • Gaussian lens law
  • Real lenses and systems of lenses may be
    approximated by thin lenses if only paraxial rays
    (near the optical axis) are considered

1/do 1/di 1/f
8
Camera Adjustments
  • Iris?
  • Changes aperture
  • Focus?
  • Changes di
  • Zoom?
  • Changes f and sometimes di

9
Zoom Lenses Varifocal
10
Zoom Lenses Parfocal
11
Focus and Depth of Field
  • For a given di, perfect focus at only one do
  • In practice, OK for some range of depths
  • Circle of confusion smaller than a pixel
  • Better depth of field with smaller apertures
  • Better approximation to pinhole camera

12
Field of View
  • Q What does field of view of camera depend on?
  • Focal length of lens
  • Size of imager
  • Object distance?

13
Computing Field of View
1/do 1/di 1/f
tan ? /2 ½ xo / do
xo / do xi / di
? 2 tan-1 ½ xi (1/f?1/do)
? ? xi / f
14
Aperture
  • Controls amount of light
  • Affects depth of field
  • Affects distortion (since thin-lens approximation
    is better near center of lens)

15
Aperture
  • Aperture typically given as f-number(also
    f-stops or just stops)
  • What is f /4?
  • Aperture is ¼ the focal length

16
Monochromatic Aberrations
  • Real lenses do not follow thin lens approximation
    because surfaces are spherical (manufacturing
    constraints)
  • Result thin-lens approximation only valid
    iffsin ? ? ?

17
Monochromatic Aberrations
  • Consider the next term in the Taylor series, i.e.
    sin ? ? ? - ?3/3!
  • Third-order theory deviations from the ideal
    thin-lens approximations
  • Called primary or Seidel aberrations

18
Spherical Aberration
  • Results in blurring of image, focus shifts when
    aperture is stopped down
  • Can vary with the way lenses are oriented

19
Coma
  • Results in changes in magnification with aperture

20
Coma
21
Distortion
  • Pincushion or barrel radial distortion
  • Varies with placement of aperture

22
Distortion
  • Varies with placement of aperture

23
Distortion
  • Varies with placement of aperture

24
Distortion
  • Varies with placement of aperture

25
First-Order Radial Distortion
  • Goal mathematical formula for distortion
  • If distortion is small, can be approximated by
    first-order formula
  • Higher-order models possible

r r (1 ? r2) r ideal distance to center
of image r distorted distance to center of
image
26
Correcting for Aberrations
  • Compound lensesuse multiplelens elements
    tocancel outaberrations
  • Lenses of differentmaterials
  • 5-15 elements, more for extreme wide angle

27
Catadioptrics
  • Catadioptric systems use bothlenses and mirrors
  • Motivations
  • Systems using parabolic mirrors can be designed
    to not introduce these aberrations
  • Easier to make very wide-angle systems with
    mirrors

28
Wide-Angle Catadioptric System
29
Other Limitations of Lenses
  • Flare light reflecting(often multiple
    times)from glass-air interface
  • Results in ghost images or haziness
  • Worse in multi-lens systems
  • Ameliorated by optical coatings (thin-film
    interference)

30
Other Limitations of Lenses
  • Optical vignetting less power per unit area
    transferred for light at an oblique angle
  • Transferred power falls off as cos4 ?
  • Result darkening of edges of image
  • Mechanical vignetting due to apertures

31
Sensors
  • Film
  • Vidicon
  • CCD
  • CMOS

32
Vidicon
  • Best-known in family of photoconductivevideo
    cameras
  • Basically television in reverse


? ? ? ?
Scanning Electron Beam
Electron Gun
Lens System
Photoconductive Plate
33
Digression Gamma
  • Vidicon tube naturally has signal that
    varieswith light intensity according to a power
    lawSignal Eg, g ? 1/2.5
  • CRT (televisions) naturally obey a power law with
    gamma ? 2.5
  • Result standard for video signals hasa gamma of
    1/2.5

34
MOS Capacitors
  • MOS Metal Oxide Semiconductor

Gate (wire)
SiO2 (insulator)
p-type silicon
35
MOS Capacitors
  • Voltage applied to gate repels positive holes
    in the semiconductor

10V

Depletion region (electron bucket)
36
MOS Capacitors
  • Photon striking the material createselectron-hole
    pair

10V
Photon

?
?
?
?
?
?
?

37
Charge Transfer
  • Can move charge from one bucket to another by
    manipulating voltages

38
Charge Transfer
  • Various schemes (e.g. three-phase-clocking) for
    transferring a series of charges along a row of
    buckets

39
CCD Architectures
  • Linear arrays
  • 2D arrays
  • Full frame
  • Frame transfer (FT)
  • Interline transfer (IT)
  • Frame interline transfer (FIT)

40
Linear CCD
  • Accumulate photons, then clock them out
  • To prevent smear first move charge to opaque
    region, then clock it out

41
Full-Frame CCD
  • Other arrangements to minimize smear

42
Frame Transfer CCD
43
Interline Transfer CCD
44
Frame Interline Transfer CCD
45
CMOS Imagers
  • Recently, can manufacture chips that combine
    photosensitive elements and processing elements
  • Benefits
  • Partial readout
  • Signal processing
  • Eliminate some supporting chips ? low cost

46
Color
  • 3-chip vs. 1-chip quality vs. cost

47
Chromatic Aberration
  • Due to dispersion in glass (focal length varies
    with the wavelength of light)
  • Result color fringes near edges of image
  • Correct by building lens systems with multiple
    kinds of glass

48
Correcting Chromatic Aberration
  • Simple way of partially correcting for residual
    chromatic aberration after the fact scale R,G,B
    channels independently

49
Video
  • Depending on the scene, pictures updatedat 1570
    Hz. perceived as continuous
  • Most video cameras use a shutter, so they are
    capturing for only part of a frame
  • Short shutter less light, have to open aperture
  • Long shutter more light, but motion blur
  • Television uses interlaced video

50
Interlacing
These rows transmitted first
These rows transmitted 1/60 sec later
51
Television
  • US NTSC standard
  • Fields are 1/60 sec.
  • 2 fields 1 frame ? frames are 1/30 sec.
  • Each frame has 525 scanlines, of which
    approximately 480 are visible
  • No discrete pixels along scanlines, but if pixels
    were square, there would be about 640 visible

52
Television
  • NTSC standard
  • Thus, an NTSC frame is about 640?480
  • Color at lower resolution than intensity
  • PAL standard
  • Lower rate fields at 50 Hz. (frames at 25 Hz.)
  • Higher resolution about 768?576
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