MULTI-SPECTRAL LIGHT-FIELD DEVICE
20230353890 · 2023-11-02
Inventors
- Christiane Gimkiewicz (Ismaning bei München, DE)
- Benjamin Gallinet (Pratteln, CH)
- Siavash Arjomand Bigdeli (Neuchâtel, CH)
- Georges Kotrotsios (Lausanne, CH)
Cpc classification
H04N23/55
ELECTRICITY
H04N23/10
ELECTRICITY
G06V10/77
PHYSICS
International classification
H04N23/10
ELECTRICITY
G06V10/77
PHYSICS
Abstract
A multi-spectral light-field device, including an imaging component, arranged to image a light-field emitted by an object point of an object and for setting an input signal including a range of incidence angles on an optical filter. The optical filter has a transmission function depending on the incidence angles to transform the input signal into an output signal including a spectral distribution associated to an angular distribution. A micro-lens array is arranged to transform the spectral distribution of the output signal into a spatial distribution on an image plane. This multi-spectral light-field device is adapted to be integrated in a small, compact and/or handheld device, as a smartphone and also to deliver high resolution images. Also an imaging system which is a compact twin camera device. Also an object identification system allowing an image reconstruction in real-time on limited computational resources of a mobile device, by using a machine-learning module.
Claims
1. Multi-spectral light-field device, comprising: an imaging component, arranged to image at least a part of the light-field emitted by at least one object point of an object and for setting an input signal comprising a range of incidence angles on an optical filter; said optical filter having a transmission function depending on the incidence angle, so as to transform said input signal into an output signal comprising a spectral distribution associated to an angular distribution; a micro-lens array, arranged to transform the spectral distribution of the output signal into a spatial distribution on an image plane.
2. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 1, wherein the optical filter has a filter transmission function which is constant along the filter's radial dimension.
3. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 2, wherein the imaging component has an F-number so that the range of incidence angles on the optical filter is within the angular acceptance of the optical filter.
4. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 3, wherein the imaging component comprising an aperture and at least one lens, said aperture having a diameter for transmitting wavelengths having an angle of incidence on the main plane of the optical filter substantially equal to 0° that fulfills the equation
5. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 1, the optical filter being an interference filter.
6. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 5, wherein the optical filter comprises stacked dielectric layers, where the layers are of high- and low refractive index and their thickness is in the order of the wavelengths or below, wherein the layers are arranged so as to create a resonance.
7. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 1, wherein the optical filter comprises a periodic corrugation.
8. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 7, wherein the optical filter comprises a resonant waveguide grating.
9. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 8, wherein the optical filter comprises: a substrate, a coating comprising: a first layer, made of a material with refractive index lower than 1.6, comprising a periodic corrugation comprising a series of protrusions, each protrusion being followed by a slot, a second layer, made of a material with refractive index higher than 1.9, comprising a periodic corrugation having the period of the periodic corrugation of the first layer, wherein the height of the protrusions is different from the first layer, a third layer, made of a material with refractive index lower than 1.6, comprising a periodic corrugation equal to the periodic corrugation of the first layer, and a metallic layer, covering the protrusions and part of the slots of the third layer.
10. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 1, wherein the optical filter is a plasmonic filter.
11. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 5, wherein the optical filter is encapsulated in an envelope.
12. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 1, wherein the micro-lens array and the optical filter share a common substrate.
13. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 12, wherein the micro-lens array and the optical filter are realised on different sides of the common substrate.
14. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 12, wherein the micro-lens array and the optical filter are realised on the same side of the common substrate, wherein the micro-lens array is on top of the optical filter.
15. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 1, comprising at least two sub-zones having a polarized response wherein adjacent sub-zones have orthogonal orientations.
16. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 1, wherein the micro-lens array is arranged for focusing rays passing a single aperture position to a single sensor position.
17. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 1, wherein the micro-lens array is arranged between a high-refractive index spacer and a low-refractive index spacer, where the refractive index difference higher than 0.2 so as to generate a refraction by the micro-lens array, and where the optical filter is arranged on the low-refractive index spacer.
18. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 1, wherein each micro-lens has a square, circular or hexagonal basis.
19. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 1, wherein the micro-lens array is placed in a square or hexagonal array.
20. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 1, wherein the micro-lens array comprises a substrate, wherein on a surface of said substrate, there is an aperture array wherein an array of micro-lenses is placed on top of this aperture array.
21. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 1, wherein the optical filter has an inhomogeneous filter transmission function that is changing along the filter's radial dimension.
22. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 21, wherein the inhomogeneous filter transmission function fits a non-constant range of incidence angles along the filter's radial dimension set by the imaging component.
23. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 21, wherein the filter transmission function is a step function.
24. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 21, wherein the filter transmission function is realized by individual thicknesses of some of various layers of high- and low-index material, wherein the different layer thicknesses are coated subsequently.
25. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 21, wherein the filter transmission function is a gradient function.
26. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 21, wherein the filter transmission function is altered by changing the period of a subwavelength structure of the optical filter.
27. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 1, wherein the optical filter is processed on a curved surface.
28. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 27, wherein the curved surface is part of an imaging lens.
29. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 1, comprising an image sensor in the image plane.
30. The multi-spectral light-field device of claim 29, wherein the micro-lens array is processed directly on top of the image sensor.
31. Imaging system comprising: the multi-spectral light-field device of claim 1, at least one reference device.
32. The imaging system of claim 31, wherein the reference device is a two-dimensional camera device, comprising an imaging lens, an aperture and an image sensor.
33. The imaging system of claim 32, wherein the imaging lens of said multi-spectral light-field device and of said two-dimensional camera device are identical.
34. The imaging system of claim 32, wherein the image sensor of the two-dimensional camera device is the same image sensor of the multi-spectral light-field device for compactness and in order to ensure temporal consistency.
35. The imaging system of claim 32, wherein in the beam path of the two-dimensional camera device there is the substrate of the optical filter and/or of the micro-lens array of the multi-spectral light-field device in order to reduce the packaging effort.
36. The imaging system of claim 31, wherein the reference device is a non-spectral light-field device.
37. The imaging system of claim 36, wherein in the beam path of the reference device there is the substrate of the optical filter and/or of the micro-lens array of the multi-spectral light-field device, devoid of one or more layers and/or one or more structures and with the micro lens-array, in order to achieve a non-spectral light-field image in the light-field section of the image sensor as a reference signal.
38. Object identification system comprising the multi-spectral light-field device of claim 1, a third machine-learning module connected to the multi-spectral light field device, and arranged for identifying the object based on its data collected by the multi-spectral light-field device.
39. The object identification system of claim 38, further comprising: at least one reference device, a first machine-learning module for identifying an object by its shape, a second machine-learning module for identifying spectral properties of the object, the third machine-learning module being arranged for evaluating the separate results of the first machine-learning module and the second machine-learning module, so as to identify the object and its properties.
40. The object identification system of claim 39, wherein the first machine-learning module, the second machine-learning module and the third machine-learning module are the same machine-learning module.
Description
SHORT DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0045] Exemplar embodiments of the invention are disclosed in the description and illustrated by the drawings in which:
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EXAMPLES OF EMBODIMENTS OF THE PRESENT INVENTION
[0073]
[0078] Alternatively, the imaging component can be made of more than two lens components.
[0079] The illustrated optical filter 3 comprises a substrate 30 and one or more layers (of coatings) and/or one or more structures 31, supported by the substrate 30. In the embodiment of
[0080] The micro-lens array 4 comprises a set of micro-lenses 44 and a substrate 40. In the embodiment of
[0081] In
[0082] In
[0083] The micro-lens array 4 is imaging the plane of the aperture 21 with coordinates A.sub.x, A.sub.y onto the image sensor 5. Thus, parts of the light-field of each object point OP are captured, wherein the spatial distribution on the image sensor 5 is depending onto the transmitted angles of the optical filter 3.
[0084] In
[0085] The optical filter 3 is placed between the imaging component 2 and the micro-lens array 4. The optical filter 3 has the inherent property to transmit the spectral distributions, e.g. the wavelengths λ.sub.i in the illustrated embodiment, in dependency of the angles of incidence, where θ denotes the radial angle and it, the azimuthal angle of incidence of the rays on the optical filter 3.
[0086] The micro-lens array 4 converts the spectral distribution to a certain spatial position on the image sensor 5, denoted in the following by the coordinates x and y. The power at sensor position L(x, y) is depending on the filter transmission function T(λ, ϕ, θ) according to the following formula:
L(x,y)=L(A.sub.x,A.sub.y)T(λ,ϕ,θ) (1)
[0087] Since each micro-lens 44 allocates for each point of the aperture 21 a different point in the sensor plane of the image sensor 5, and each aperture point causes a different angle of incidence θ.sub.i on the optical filter 3, the spectral content of the object point OP is spatially distributed onto the image sensor 5.
[0088] According to the invention, parts of the spectral and directional content of the light-field of each object point are captured. For object identification, the captured spectral, spatial and angular data are analysed. In one preferred embodiment and as discussed below, a machine-learning module is used for object identification.
[0089] In other words, the optical filter 3 is arranged so as to transform an input signal defined on a range of incidence angles into an output signal comprising a spectral distribution associated to an angular distribution. In other words, the output signal comprises angle-dependent spectral contents of the light-field. Those angle-dependent spectral contents are thus spatially distributed on an image plane by the micro-lens array 4.
[0090] The optical filter 3 allows then to create a wavelength and/or polarization dependent spatial distribution of the light-field on the image sensor 5.
[0091] Advantageously, the multi-spectral light-field device 10 according to the invention is sufficiently compact and therefore it can be integrated into a mobile device as a smartphone. In one preferred embodiment, the size of the device 10 is ˜3×3×3 mm.sup.3.
[0092] Advantageously, the multi-spectral light-field device 10 according to the invention transmits the spectrum for an entire image without specific bands (“hyperspectral”). Therefore, it can be adapted to any type of image sensor 5, whose pixel resolution will the spectral resolution.
[0093] Advantageously, the multi-spectral light-field device 10 captures information within one frame: therefore, it is a snap-shot camera that can measure the properties of moving objects.
[0094] The spectral resolution of the multi-spectral light-field device 10 can be tuned by the balancing of the F-number of the imaging lens 22, 24 of the imaging component 2, the filter function of the optical filter 3, and the AOI on the micro-lens array 4. Depending on the filter function, its layout and distribution, different embodiments are described in the following.
[0095] In a first embodiment, an optical filter 3 characterised by a single filter function is used. This optical filter 3 comprises at least one layer. For example, the optical filter of
[0096] In one preferred embodiment, the imaging component 2 is adapted to the optical filter 3. For example, the imaging component 2 is arranged so as to set the range of incidence angles on the optical filter 3, e.g. by adjusting the F-number F # of the imaging component 2 so that the set range of incidence angles on the optical filter 3 includes the angular limits of the filter transmission function. In other words, the imaging component has an F-number so that the range of incidence angles on the optical filter is within the angular acceptance of the optical filter.
[0097] The opposite strategy could be used as well, setting up a gradient or step-wise filter function that matches the range of incidence angles of the imaging component 2. In this case, the optical filter 3 has a filter transmission function which is not constant along the filter's radial dimension r to fit a non-constant range of incidence angles along the filter's radial dimension r set by the imaging component 2, as will be discussed later.
[0098] An example of adapting the imaging component 2 to the optical filter 3 is described with reference to
[0099] For objects at a distance Z=g much larger than the focal length f, for example g>100×f or g>1000×f, the cone angle of the light-field is given by the aperture diameter D, the chief ray angle θ(r), and the focal length f of the imaging lens having an F number F #=f/D:
[0100] For the object point at the position X=Y=0, its light-field's spectral range is λ.sub.0(θ.sub.0)<λ<λ.sub.1(θ.sub.1), where the minimum angle of incidence on the optical filter 3 is θ.sub.0=0° and the maximum angle is θ.sub.1, wherein:
[0101] The filter function T(λ, ϕ, θ) is constant, i.e. it does not depend on the optical filter's radial dimension r, visible e.g. on
[0102] The transmitted spectrum is changing with the chief ray angle θ(r), illustrated in
tan θ.sub.2=tan θ(r)−tan θ.sub.1 and tan θ.sub.3=tan θ(r)+tan θ.sub.1 (4)
[0103] In this case, the wavelengths λ<λ.sub.2(θ.sub.2) would not be transmitted for largest chief rays θ(r). In one embodiment and for a constant filter function, the optical design provides for each point in the optical filter plane a minimum angle of incidence of θ=0° by a large aperture that fulfils the equation
so that tan 02 becomes zero. Thus, the common spectral range of central and marginal light-fields is extended to λ.sub.0(θ.sub.0)<λ<λ(θr.sub.max), as illustrated in
[0104] In the embodiment of
[0105] The transmission filter function of the optical filter 3 of the device according to the invention allocates for the given angular width Δθ a spectral width Δλ. For example, the following values Δθ=52°, θ.sub.2=0° and θ.sub.3=30° correspond to a range of AOI range from −30° to 30°.
[0106] An AOI-dependent filter can be realized from diffraction and/or interference effect, generating resonances in the scattered field also known as physical colours. The structure of the optical filter can be homogeneous, i.e. comprising only one set of parameters. For interference filters, this set of parameters comprises e.g. the thicknesses and refractive indexes of the interference layers. For diffractive waveguides, this set of parameters comprises e.g. the thicknesses and refractive indexes of the thin film coatings, the periodicity, the fill factor and depth of the protrusions. The incident light on the optical filter 3 is characterized in particular by its wave vector k.sub.in. The optical filter 3 on the other hand is characterized by a resonance along a given axis x and a resonance wavelength λ.sub.res, usually obtained from a constructive interference effect. This condition reads:
where n is the refractive index of the resonance medium and θ.sub.in is the incidence angle. Thus, a relationship between the incidence angle and the wavelength is achieved.
[0107] Such a dispersion can be obtained for example with an optical filter which is an interference filter. In one embodiment, the interference filter comprises stacked dielectric layers, wherein the layers are of high- and low-refractive index and their thickness is in the order of the wavelengths or below. By an appropriate layer design comprising establishing the number, thicknesses and refractive index of the interference layers, a resonance is created, which allows only a certain wavelength to transmit the filter at a certain input and output angle. Such interference filters provide a maximum angular drift of up to 30 nm to 60 nm for e.g. Δθ/2=30° to 40°. An estimation of the resonance wavelength as a function of the AOI for λ.sub.res=550 nm is shown in
[0108] In another embodiment, the AOI-dependent optical filter comprises a waveguide with periodic corrugation, as it can show a larger spectral range (SR). In such case, a resonance is accomplished when the light is coupled by the periodic corrugation (e.g. a grating) into the plane of the waveguide (effect known as Wood-Rayleigh anomaly), wherein:
where θ.sub.in is the incidence angle of the wavelength λ, n.sub.1 and n.sub.2 are the refractive index of the superstrate and of the substrate, P is the periodicity of the corrugation and m the diffraction order. An estimation of the resonance wavelength as a function of the AOI for
P=350 nm, n.sub.1=1 and n.sub.2=1.52 is shown in
[0109] The angular range from −30° to 30° illustrated in
[0110]
[0111] Depending on the waveguide materials, the light coupled in transmission at resonance has a high amplitude, while other wavelengths for the same incidence angle have a low amplitude. Therefore, a filtering effect is built, which can be narrowband in the example of
[0112] In the example of
[0113] The optical filter 3 of
[0114] The optical filter 3 of
[0115] Finally, the protrusions and part of the slots (over a length t.sub.4 for each side of the protrusion) of the third layer 32′″ are covered by a coating 32″″, made e.g. of Al, and having a thickness t.sub.3 over the protrusions of the third layer 32′″.
[0116] In the example of
[0117] In one preferred embodiment, the dispersive resonant waveguide grating filter 3 of
[0118] In one preferred embodiment, the dispersive resonant waveguide grating filter 3 of
[0119] When the incidence angle is varied, the resonance condition is spectrally shifted and the transmission peak is shifted, too, as illustrated in
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[0121] This uncertainty can be lifted by considering the full dispersion of the filter, along both polar and azimuthal angles, as illustrated in
[0122] Although the peak position is the same for ϕ=0° in
[0123] A resonant waveguide grating filter comprises subwavelength structures to couple light into and out of wave-guiding layers, made of metallic or dielectric or a combination of metallic and dielectric materials. The structures can be fabricated by lithography or UV-replication of a UV-curable material.
[0124]
[0125] In the example of
[0126] In the example of
[0127] The manufacturing of the corrugation of the resonant waveguide gratings used as examples in this application is not limited to UV replication, but can be performed with other methods such as hot embossing, electron beam lithography, photolithography, deep UV photolithography, laser interference lithography, or focused ion beam milling. The layers material deposition can be realized for example by thermal evaporation, sputtering or by wet solution processing.
[0128] The invention is not limited to the described examples of AOI-dependent optical filters 3. Alternatively, the AOI-dependent optical filter 3 can be based for example on resonant plasmonic nanostructures, coated nanoparticles, dielectric or metallic meta-surfaces or diffraction gratings.
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[0131] The optical filter 3, e.g. the optical filter of
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[0134] The required spectral resolution for a multi-spectral light-field device 10 can be designed as explained in the following. A single micro-lens 44 focuses all rays passing a single aperture position, e.g. A1 in
[0135] Light rays emanating of the object points in the range of OP1 to OP2 may pass through the identical aperture positions and are superimposing on the image sensor 5, at an image point. The spectral width at the image sensor position (x, y) is thus determined by the back focal length f of the imaging lens 20, 22 and the diameter d.sub.ML of the micro-lens' aperture:
[0136] In one embodiment, it is possible to limit the spectral deviation within said image point, if the angular acceptance angle of each micro-lens is in the range of 1°<δθ<2° only. This can be achieved by a small micro-lens diameter d.sub.ML, e.g. by a micro-lens diameter d.sub.ML≤100 μm. e.g. d.sub.ML≤10 μm. In dependency of the optical filter function, the spectral precision may be in the order of δλ≤1 nm.
[0137] The micro-lens array 4 may also have an aperture array to improve its imaging quality. Each micro-lens can have a square, circular or hexagonal basis. The micro lens arrays can be placed in a square or hexagonal (closely packed) array. The micro-lens array can also be replaced by an array of diffractive lenses, Fresnel lenses or diffractive optical elements to perform the same functionality.
[0138] The micro-lens array 4 may consist of a single array of micro-lenses or several micro-lens arrays, where each micro-lens array may have its own substrate or is processed on the back-side of another micro-lens array. In one embodiment, the micro-lens array 4 is processed directly on top of the image sensor 5, as illustrated in
[0139] In the embodiment of
[0140] The illustrated optical filter 3 comprises a substrate 30 and one or more layers and one or more structures 31 on top of the substrate 30. In the embodiment of
[0141]
[0142] An array of micro-lenses 44 is then placed on top of this aperture array 430. In one embodiment, the micro-lens 44 are replicated a material curable by ultraviolet light, for example in a uv-curable sol-gel material. Alternatively, the micro-lens array can be fabricated by photolithography. In the embodiment of
[0143] Typical values for the micro-lens array parameters comprising spherical micro-lenses for an imaging lens of focal length f=1.44 mm considering two different F-numbers are given in the table 1 here below for a uv-curable sol-gel material:
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 σ.sub.LP/diffr. F# CRA.sub.max θ.sub.1 σ.sub.spot/p.sub.MLA d.sub.AP d.sub.MLA ROC/t.sub.c ML bfl p.sub.MLA limit 1.17 35° 26° 38 μm 32 μm 46 μm 30 μm 36 μm 34 μm 1.8 μm 30 μm 46 μm 30 μm 39 μm 36 μm 1.4 μm 24 μm 40 μm 30 μm 44 μm 38 μm 1.4 μm 20 μm 36 μm 30 μm 48 μm 40 μm 1.8 μm 1 35° 31° 59 μm 36 μm 56 μm 40 μm 57 μm 60 μm 1.2 μm 40 μm 62 μm 45 μm 65 μm 64 μm 1.3 μm 40 μm 66 μm 50 μm 77 μm 74 μm 1.4 μm 30 μm 58 μm 50 μm 84 μm 78 μm 2.0 μm 50 μm 74 μm 50 μm 67 μm 68 μm 2.1 μm
wherein: [0144] F # indicates the F number of each micro-lens 44 [0145] CRAmax indicates the maximum chief ray angle of the imaging component 2 [0146] θ.sub.1 indicates the maximum incidence angle on the filter 3 [0147] σ.sub.spot indicates the root mean square value of the radius of an imaged object point; the spot is created by the imaging component 2 in the plane of the micro-lens array 4 [0148] p.sub.MLA indicates the period of the micro-lens array 4 [0149] d.sub.AP indicates the diameter of the aperture of the aperture array 430 [0150] d.sub.MLA indicates the diameter aperture of each micro-lens 44 [0151] ROC indicates the radius of curvature of each micro-lens 44 [0152] t.sub.c indicates the thickness of each micro-lens 44 [0153] (ML) bfl indicates the back-focal length of the micro-lens array 4 [0154] σ.sub.LF indicates root mean square value of the spot radius on the image sensor or (if the ray-traced spot size is smaller than the diffraction limit) the expected diffraction limit.
The micro-lenses can also have a conical shape to reduce optical aberrations.
[0155] In one embodiment, if an imaging lens of the imaging component 2 cannot be adapted to the spectral range of the overall device 10, the filter function may have to be adapted towards the changing chief ray angle θ(r). In one embodiment, the transmission function of the filter is changing along the optical filter's radial dimension r.
T(Δ,ϕ,θ)=F(Δ,ϕ,θ,r) (10)
[0156] In one embodiment, the filter function F(λ, ϕ, θ, r) is a step function, as in the embodiment of
[0157] In one embodiment, the filter function F(λ, ϕ, θ, r) is a gradient function, as in the embodiment of
[0158] Both configurations of
[0159]
[0160] The change in steps is an approach for filters that are processed by lithography and thin film coating or other non-replication-processes like interference filters. Each filter function is realized by individual thicknesses of some of the various layers of the high- and low-index material. Different layer thicknesses have to be coated subsequently, which makes the filter fabrication quite costly, as mask design changes are required, and thus only a limited number of different filter functions can be realized.
[0161] The transmission function of plasmonic or resonant waveguide filters can be altered e.g. by solely changing the period of the subwavelength structure of the optical filter 3. This change in the period can be established in a cost effective manner, e.g. by UV-replication and thin film coating. Thus, a change of the filter transmission versus the filter radius in steps or as a gradient is feasible.
[0162] The parameters of the optical filter 3 can be adapted in order to address other spectral ranges than the visible. In particular, the periodicity increase to 0.5 μm, 1 μm and above yields resonances in the near infra-red (NIR) and (short-wave infra-red) SWIR ranges.
[0163] In one embodiment, the filter function can be processed on a (curved) surface near the imaging component, e.g. the imaging lens, or directly on the imaging lens. The integration of the optical filter on the imaging lens is cost effective.
[0164] In one embodiment, the filter is processed on a curved surface near the imaging lens 20 or 22, as illustrated in
[0165] In another embodiment, the curved surface is part of the imaging lens, as illustrated in
[0166]
[0167] In the embodiment of
[0168] In one preferred embodiment, the imaging lenses 22 and 52 are identical.
[0169] For compactness and in order to ensure temporal consistency, it is a further advantage to implement the high-resolution 2D camera 50 onto the same image sensor 5 of the device 10 according to the invention. Since the 2D beam path is not including a lens array, the spatial resolution is (at minimum) as high as given by the image sensor 5. Thus, the 2D camera 50 is generating a high resolution 2D image on the 2D section 550 of this image sensor 5 and the multi-spectral light-field camera 10 is generating a multi-spectral light-field image on the light-field section 510 of this image sensor 5.
[0170] In order to reduce the packaging effort, it is of advantage to implement in the beam paths of both lenses the substrate 53 of the multi-spectral light-field camera 10 (without micro lens array and filter coatings). In other words, in the beam path of the 2D camera device there is the substrate 53 of the optical filter and/or of the micro-lens array 4 of the multi-spectral light-field device 10, without the micro lens-array 4 and the one or more layers and/or one or more structures 31.
[0171] In order to achieve a focused image of the object onto the 2D camera section 550 of the image sensor 5, it is proposed to adjust the aperture 51 of the 2D camera device 50, to achieve a longer focal length, so that the image plane of the 2D camera is on the image sensor. The length difference to cover is thus the thickness and the back focal length of the micro lens array. The high resolution 2D camera section 550 and the multi-spectral light-field camera section 510 build together a very compact twin camera.
[0172] All objects captured by the twin camera are captured within one frame and will not suffer from motion blur. Further, the parallax between those sections 510, 550 is improving the resolution of the third dimension.
[0173]
[0174] The imaging system 100 of
[0175] In other words, in the imaging system 100 of
[0176] In other words again, in the imaging system 100 of
[0177] More than two devices 10 according to the invention in an imaging system 100 can be used as well.
[0178]
[0179] In this context, the expression “object identification” indicates the act of recognising or naming the object and its properties, in particular its footprint, colour(s), size, spectral content, material, shape, type of reflection, surface properties, etc.
[0180] The multi-spectral light-field device 10 according to the invention, alone or in combination with a 2D camera device 50 as in the imaging system 100, takes spectral light-fields of the entire object. Each micro-lens creates a light-field depending on the spatial and spectral object point OP, the chief ray θ(r), and the imaging component parameters. For different object distances, the set of parameters is changing and the spectral and spatial content is distributed accordingly.
[0181] For object identification, the captured light-fields have to be analysed. In one embodiment, a machine-learning module, as a neural network module, is used for object identification.
[0182] In this context, the expression “machine-learning module” indicates a module which needs to be trained in order to learn i.e. to progressively improve a performance on a specific task.
[0183] The machine-learning module in a preferred embodiment is a neural network module, i.e. a module comprising a network of elements called neurons. Each neuron receives input and produces an output depending on that input and an “activation function”. The output of certain neurons is connected to the input of other neurons, thereby forming a weighted network. The weights can be modified by a process called learning which is governed by a learning or training function.
[0184] Although the neural network module is a preferred implementation of the machine-learning module, the object identification system 200 is not limited to the use of a neural network module only, but could comprise other types of machine-learning modules, e.g. and in a non-limiting way machine-learning modules arranged to implement at least one of the following machine-learning algorithms: [0185] decision trees, association rule learning, deep learning, inductive logic programming, support vector machines, clustering, Bayesian networks, reinforcement learning, representation learning, similarity and metric learning, sparse dictionary learning, genetic algorithms, rule-based machine-learning, learning classifier systems.
[0186] In one embodiment, the neural network module is a deep neural network module, e.g. it comprises multiple hidden layers between the input and output layers, e.g. at least three layers.
[0187] The machine-learning module has been trained to recognize the target object. Only image content that is relevant for the object identification is processed, which makes the image processing by the machine-learning module superior to non-compressive image processing.
[0188] In the embodiment of
[0189] In another embodiment, multiple two-dimensional cameras are used as reference devices around the multi-spectral light-field device to cover the different viewpoints of the object.
[0190] In the embodiment of
[0191] For example as by a human eye, the monochrome image of a fruit is sufficient to identify an object, e.g. an apple. Such an identification of an object by its shape has been taught to a first machine-learning module, as a first neural network module, with learned shaped images 120, so as to perform a shape identification (step 130) by the machine-learning module.
[0192] From the 2D image 150 it is also possible to define the region of interest or ROI (step 140). In the embodiment of
[0193] A second machine-learning module, as a second neural network module has been taught by a set of different objects (different fruits in the example of
[0194] In the embodiment of
[0195] Evaluating the separating results of both machine-learning modules via a third-machine learning module (step 210) gives as a final result (step 220) the identified object (an apple in
[0196] The advantage of this strategy is a reduction in the computational effort, and the possibility to reuse a once taught machine-learning module to recognize shapes in combination with a newly taught machine-learning module to recognize new properties like e.g. the gluten content.
[0197] Possible and not limitative applications of the object identification system 200 are food applications and auto-focusing applications (determination of the focal length).
REFERENCE SIGNS USED IN THE DRAWINGS
[0198] 1 Object [0199] 2 Imaging component [0200] 3 Optical Filter [0201] 4 Micro-lens array [0202] 5 Image Sensor [0203] 10 Multi-spectral light-field device [0204] 21, 21′ Aperture [0205] 20, 22, 22′ Lens [0206] 30 Substrate of the optical filter [0207] 31 One or more layers and/or one or more structures [0208] 32′ First layer of the optical filter [0209] 32″ Second layer of the optical filter [0210] 32′″ Third layer of the optical filter [0211] 32″″ Coating of the optical filter [0212] 33, 33′ Protrusion of the periodic corrugation of the optical filter [0213] 34 Common substrate between the optical filter and the micro-lens array [0214] 35 Slot of the periodic corrugation of the optical filter [0215] 36 Subwavelength structure [0216] 37 Envelope [0217] 10 Substrate of the micro-lens array [0218] 41 First surface of the substrate 40 [0219] 42 Second surface of the substrate 40 [0220] 43 Aperture covered by the micro-lens [0221] 44 Micro-lens [0222] 50 Reference device—Two-dimensional camera device [0223] 51 Aperture of the two-dimensional camera device [0224] 52 Imaging lens of the two-dimensional camera device [0225] 53 Common substrate between the device 10 and the device 50 [0226] 61 Low-refractive index spacer [0227] 62 High-refractive index spacer [0228] 70 Reference device—(Non-spectral) light-field device [0229] 100 Imaging system (twin camera device) [0230] 110 Step of providing a multi-spectral light-filed image [0231] 120 Step of learning shaped images [0232] 130 Step of shape identification [0233] 140 Step of defining the region of interest (ROI) [0234] 150 Step of providing a 2D image [0235] 160 Step of retrieving multi-spectral light-field data in the ROI [0236] 170 Step of learning property images [0237] 180 Step of identification of the object properties [0238] 190 Step of evaluation of 3D data [0239] 200 Object identification system [0240] 210 Step of evaluation of the object properties [0241] 220 Step of delivering the result [0242] 300 Subzone of the optical filter [0243] 430 Aperture array [0244] 510 Multi-spectral light-field section of the image sensor [0245] 550 2D section of the image sensor [0246] 570 Light-filed section of the image sensor [0247] A1 Aperture position [0248] bfl Back focal length [0249] d, d′ Height of the protrusion D.sub.Ap Diameter of the aperture of the aperture array [0250] d.sub.ML, d.sub.MLA Diameter aperture of the micro-lens [0251] D Diameter aperture of the imaging component [0252] OP, OP1, OP2 Object point [0253] p.sub.MLA Period of the micro-lens array [0254] P Periodicity of the corrugation [0255] r Optical filter's radial dimension [0256] ref Reference direction [0257] ROC Radius of curvature of the micro-lens [0258] t.sub.c Thickness of the micro-lens [0259] t.sub.i Thickness [0260] θ.sub.i Angle [0261] θ(r) Chief ray angle [0262] λ.sub.i Wavelength