Improvement of the optical image reconstruction based on multiplexed quantum ghost images
- Authors: Balakin D.A.1, Belinsky A.V.1, Chirkin A.S.1
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Affiliations:
- Department of Physics
- Issue: Vol 125, No 2 (2017)
- Pages: 210-222
- Section: Atoms, Molecules, Optics
- URL: https://journals.rcsi.science/1063-7761/article/view/192426
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S1063776117070147
- ID: 192426
Cite item
Abstract
Ghost imaging allows one to obtain information on an object from the spatial correlation function between photons propagating through or reflected from the object and photons of the reference arm. In this case, detection in the object arm is performed over the entire aperture of the beam and, therefore, it does not give information on the object. The reference beam does not interact with the object, but is recorded with a scanning point detector or a CCD array permitting the measurement of the spatial correlation function of photons in two arms. The use of multimode entangled quantum light beams by illuminating the object by one beam and orienting other beams to reference arms makes it possible to obtain simultaneously several ghost images (GIs). Cross correlations of multiplexed GIs (MGIs) are determined by eighth-order field correlation functions. A special algorithm is developed for calculating higher-order correlations of Bose operators. The presence of GI cross correlations is used for improving the quality of the reconstructed object’s image by their processing using the measurement reduction method. An example of the computer simulation of the image reconstruction by MGIs formed in the field of four-frequency entangled quantum states is considered. It is found that in this case the reduced GI has a signal-to-noise ratio several times higher than that of GIs.
About the authors
D. A. Balakin
Department of Physics
Author for correspondence.
Email: kvorosh@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Moscow, 119991
A. V. Belinsky
Department of Physics
Email: kvorosh@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Moscow, 119991
A. S. Chirkin
Department of Physics
Email: kvorosh@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Moscow, 119991
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