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Shadow Imaging with Low-Intensity Thermal Light

ORAL

Abstract

The ability of image reconstruction using low photon flux would be desirable for numerous scientific, commercial, and defense imaging applications. We demonstrate this ability with the Shadow imaging (SI) scheme. In this novel imaging technique, the photon noise statistics of the probe beam is manipulated after its interaction with the object. Homodyne-like detection protocol eliminates the detrimental effect of the dark noise of the CCD camera. The SI scheme was originally proposed with the squeezed vacuum probe. Here, we use thermal state probe and provide theoretical as well as experimental validation of its utility in the SI scheme. We evaluate the signal-to-noise (SNR) and identify the regimes where the SI scheme has an advantage over the classical imaging scheme. Finally, to exhibit the full potential of this scheme, we image a biological specimen on a CCD camera using fewer than 500 photons in total from a low-intensity ( ≤1 average photons) thermal probe.

Publication: Low-Light Shadow Imaging using Quantum-Noise Detection with a Camera: arXiv:2106.00785 (submitted)<br>Shadow Imaging with Low-Intensity Thermal Light (submitted)

Presenters

  • Pratik J Barge

    Hearne Institute for Theoretical Physics, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Louisiana State University, Louisiana State University

Authors

  • Pratik J Barge

    Hearne Institute for Theoretical Physics, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Louisiana State University, Louisiana State University

  • Ziqi Niu

    The College of William & Mary

  • Savannah Cuozzo

    William & Mary

  • Eugeniy E Mikhailov

    William & Mary

  • Irina B Novikova

    William & Mary

  • Hwang Lee

    LSU

  • Authur Suits

    Princeton University, Aalto University, U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, Louisiana State University, University of South Florida, DBIO, Boston College, QCD Labs, Aalto University, DMP, Univeristy of Chicago, University of California, Berkeley, University of Delaware, University of Missouri