Title :
Compressive Coded Aperture Spectral Imaging: An Introduction
Author :
Arce, Gonzalo R. ; Brady, David J. ; Carin, Lawrence ; Arguello, Henry ; Kittle, David S.
Author_Institution :
Electr. & Comput. Eng, Univ. of Delaware, Newark, DE, USA
Abstract :
Imaging spectroscopy involves the sensing of a large amount of spatial information across a multitude of wavelengths. Conventional approaches to hyperspectral sensing scan adjacent zones of the underlying spectral scene and merge the results to construct a spectral data cube. Push broom spectral imaging sensors, for instance, capture a spectral cube with one focal plane array (FPA) measurement per spatial line of the scene [1], [2]. Spectrometers based on optical bandpass filters sequentially scan the scene by tuning the bandpass filters in steps. The disadvantage of these techniques is that they require scanning a number of zones linearly in proportion to the desired spatial and spectral resolution. This article surveys compressive coded aperture spectral imagers, also known as coded aperture snapshot spectral imagers (CASSI) [1], [3], [4], which naturally embody the principles of compressive sensing (CS) [5], [6]. The remarkable advantage of CASSI is that the entire data cube is sensed with just a few FPA measurements and, in some cases, with as little as a single FPA shot.
Keywords :
band-pass filters; compressed sensing; focal planes; image coding; optical filters; visible spectroscopy; coded aperture snapshot spectral imagers; compressive coded aperture spectral imaging; compressive sensing; focal plane array measurement; hyperspectral sensing; imaging spectroscopy; optical bandpass filters; push broom spectral imaging sensors; spatial information; spatial resolution; spectral cube; spectral resolution; spectrometers; Detectors; Optical filters; Optical imaging; Optical sensors; Optical signal processing; Spectroscopy; Tutorials;
Journal_Title :
Signal Processing Magazine, IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/MSP.2013.2278763