High-speed motion blur compensation system in infrared region using galvanometer mirror and thermography camera

Author(s):  
Yuki Kubota ◽  
Tomohiko Hayakawa ◽  
Yushan Ke ◽  
Yushi Moko ◽  
Masatoshi Ishikawa
2015 ◽  
Vol 23 (25) ◽  
pp. 31648 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tomohiko Hayakawa ◽  
Takanoshin Watanabe ◽  
Masatoshi Ishikawa

Author(s):  
Denys Rozumnyi ◽  
Jan Kotera ◽  
Filip Šroubek ◽  
Jiří Matas

AbstractObjects moving at high speed along complex trajectories often appear in videos, especially videos of sports. Such objects travel a considerable distance during exposure time of a single frame, and therefore, their position in the frame is not well defined. They appear as semi-transparent streaks due to the motion blur and cannot be reliably tracked by general trackers. We propose a novel approach called Tracking by Deblatting based on the observation that motion blur is directly related to the intra-frame trajectory of an object. Blur is estimated by solving two intertwined inverse problems, blind deblurring and image matting, which we call deblatting. By postprocessing, non-causal Tracking by Deblatting estimates continuous, complete, and accurate object trajectories for the whole sequence. Tracked objects are precisely localized with higher temporal resolution than by conventional trackers. Energy minimization by dynamic programming is used to detect abrupt changes of motion, called bounces. High-order polynomials are then fitted to smooth trajectory segments between bounces. The output is a continuous trajectory function that assigns location for every real-valued time stamp from zero to the number of frames. The proposed algorithm was evaluated on a newly created dataset of videos from a high-speed camera using a novel Trajectory-IoU metric that generalizes the traditional Intersection over Union and measures the accuracy of the intra-frame trajectory. The proposed method outperforms the baselines both in recall and trajectory accuracy. Additionally, we show that from the trajectory function precise physical calculations are possible, such as radius, gravity, and sub-frame object velocity. Velocity estimation is compared to the high-speed camera measurements and radars. Results show high performance of the proposed method in terms of Trajectory-IoU, recall, and velocity estimation.


Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 1137
Author(s):  
Ondřej Holešovský ◽  
Radoslav Škoviera ◽  
Václav Hlaváč ◽  
Roman Vítek

We compare event-cameras with fast (global shutter) frame-cameras experimentally, asking: “What is the application domain, in which an event-camera surpasses a fast frame-camera?” Surprisingly, finding the answer has been difficult. Our methodology was to test event- and frame-cameras on generic computer vision tasks where event-camera advantages should manifest. We used two methods: (1) a controlled, cheap, and easily reproducible experiment (observing a marker on a rotating disk at varying speeds); (2) selecting one challenging practical ballistic experiment (observing a flying bullet having a ground truth provided by an ultra-high-speed expensive frame-camera). The experimental results include sampling/detection rates and position estimation errors as functions of illuminance and motion speed; and the minimum pixel latency of two commercial state-of-the-art event-cameras (ATIS, DVS240). Event-cameras respond more slowly to positive than to negative large and sudden contrast changes. They outperformed a frame-camera in bandwidth efficiency in all our experiments. Both camera types provide comparable position estimation accuracy. The better event-camera was limited by pixel latency when tracking small objects, resulting in motion blur effects. Sensor bandwidth limited the event-camera in object recognition. However, future generations of event-cameras might alleviate bandwidth limitations.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Elena Goi ◽  
Xi Chen ◽  
Qiming Zhang ◽  
Benjamin P. Cumming ◽  
Steffen Schoenhardt ◽  
...  

AbstractOptical machine learning has emerged as an important research area that, by leveraging the advantages inherent to optical signals, such as parallelism and high speed, paves the way for a future where optical hardware can process data at the speed of light. In this work, we present such optical devices for data processing in the form of single-layer nanoscale holographic perceptrons trained to perform optical inference tasks. We experimentally show the functionality of these passive optical devices in the example of decryptors trained to perform optical inference of single or whole classes of keys through symmetric and asymmetric decryption. The decryptors, designed for operation in the near-infrared region, are nanoprinted on complementary metal-oxide–semiconductor chips by galvo-dithered two-photon nanolithography with axial nanostepping of 10 nm1,2, achieving a neuron density of >500 million neurons per square centimetre. This power-efficient commixture of machine learning and on-chip integration may have a transformative impact on optical decryption3, sensing4, medical diagnostics5 and computing6,7.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katherine J. Dobson ◽  
Sophia B. Coban ◽  
Sam A. McDonald ◽  
Joanna Walsh ◽  
Robert Atwood ◽  
...  

Abstract. A variable volume flow cell has been integrated with state-of-the-art ultra-high speed synchrotron x-ray tomography imaging. The combination allows the first real time (sub-second) capture of dynamic pore (micron) scale fluid transport processes in 4D (3D + time). With 3D data volumes acquired at up to 20 Hz, we perform in situ experiments that capture high frequency pore-scale dynamics in 5–25 mm diameter samples with voxel (3D equivalent of a pixel) resolution of 2.5 to 3.8 µm. The data are free from motion artefacts, can be spatially registered or collected in the same orientation making them suitable for detailed quantitative analysis of the dynamic fluid distribution pathways and processes. The method presented here are capable of capturing a wide range of high frequency non equilibrium pore-scale processed including wetting, dilution, mixing and reaction phenomena, without sacrificing significant spatial resolution. As well as fast streaming (continuous acquisition) at 20 Hz, it also allows larger-scale and longer term experimental runs to be sampled intermittently at lower frequency (time-lapse imaging); benefiting from fast image acquisition rates to prevent motion blur in highly dynamic systems. This marks a major technical breakthrough for quantification of high frequency pore scale processes: processes that are critical for developing and validating more accurate multiscale flow models through spatially and temporally heterogeneous pore networks.


1994 ◽  
Vol 158 ◽  
pp. 376-378
Author(s):  
T. Chandrasekhar ◽  
N. M. Ashok ◽  
Sam Ragland

A program of High Angular Resolution observations of stars and their circumstellar regions using the technique of lunar occultations has been initiated at the 1.2 m telescope at Gurushikhar (24°39′ N, 72°47′ E), India. A liquid nitrogen cooled InSb detector based high speed Infrared photometer with millisecond data acquisition capabilities has been developed for the near Infrared region (1–5 μm) and eight occultations have been successfully observed in the K band (2.2 μm). The sources are (IRC No. -10578, +10013, +20034, +30094, +20190, +20200, +20073 and +00198. The diffraction pattern is clearly seen in all the observations. A convolution analysis involving the system frequency response, filter bandwidth and one dimensional source structure has been carried out to fit the data. System capability has been determined to be ~ 6 milliarcseconds.


2016 ◽  
Vol 34 (6) ◽  
pp. 411-418
Author(s):  
Takahiro Ueno ◽  
Tadayoshi Aoyama ◽  
Qingyi Gu ◽  
Takeshi Takaki ◽  
Idaku Ishii ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Louis Christensen ◽  
Richard Celestina ◽  
Spencer Sperling ◽  
Randall Mathison ◽  
Hakan Aksoy ◽  
...  

Abstract A high-speed infrared camera is used to measure the temperature of blade tips in a cooled high-pressure turbine operating at corrected engine conditions in The Ohio State University short duration Turbine Test Facility. These experiments create a challenging problem for infrared imaging since the rotor turns at over 13,000 rpm with tip speeds on the order of 300 m/s, and the surface temperature of the airfoils is on the order of 350 K. This means that the camera needs to capture a low intensity signal in a very short time period. This paper will review the design and operation of a measurement procedure to accomplish this difficult task along with the post-processing steps necessary to extract useful data. Raw infrared images are processed by deblurring the images using a non-blind Wiener filter and mapping the two-dimensional data onto the three-dimensional blade. This paper also describes experiments covering a range of cooling flow rates and main flow temperatures. In addition, several tests with no main flow and only cooling flow were performed at lower speeds to reduce motion blur and enable the separation of internal and external heat transfer information. Results show that the infrared data is consistent and can provide quantitative comparisons of cooling performance even at the high rotation speed. This paper presents the lessons learned for high-speed infrared measurement along with representative data to illustrate the repeatability and capability of the measurement scheme as well as suggested improvements to guide further development.


2021 ◽  
Vol 60 (15) ◽  
pp. C92
Author(s):  
Morten Hoppe ◽  
Sebastian Schmidtmann ◽  
Christian Aßmann ◽  
Martin Honsberg ◽  
Tobias Milde ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 25 (8) ◽  
pp. 9171 ◽  
Author(s):  
Huijie Zhao ◽  
Xiaochun Diao ◽  
Hongzhi Jiang ◽  
Xudong Li

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