Introduction
Author(s): Richard H. Vollmerhausen, Ronald G. Driggers
Published: 2000
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
This chapter provides an introduction to several topics. First, the physical processes involved in sampling and displaying an image are discussed. In a staring sensor, the image is blurred by the optics, and then the detector array both blurs and samples the image. The detector samples are then used to construct the displayed picture. Those physical processes that occur in a sampled imager are described. It is convenient when analyzing sampled systems, however, to conceptually separate the pre-blur, sampling, and post-blur (display blur) attributes of the system. These three steps in the generic sampling process are described and the importance of each step discussed. Next, the system properties known as linearity and shift invariance are discussed. Systems which are both linear and shift invariant can be characterized by a transfer function. Circuits and optical systems, for example, can be characterized by their Modulation Transfer Functions (MTF). This chapter describes the transfer function concept using an electrical, low-pass filter as an example. For linear, shift-invariant systems, the transfer function provides a quantitative way of characterizing system behavior. Sampled systems are linear, so Fourier transform theory can be used to analyze sampled systems. However, sampled systems are not shift invariant. It is the lack of the shift invariance property which differentiates sampled systems from other systems and makes sampled systems more difficult to analyze. The lack of shift invariance in a sampled system is illustrated. Also, the reasons that a sampled system cannot be assigned a transfer function are explained. At the end of this chapter, three different mathematical ways of representing the sampling processes are presented. These three derivations correspond to three different physical views of the sampling process. The physical basis of the mathematical techniques used in Chapter 3 is described, and the role of the display in a sampled system is put into perspective. For simplicity, many of the examples in this chapter are one-dimensional, but the discussion and conclusions apply to two-dimensional imagery.
Online access to SPIE eBooks is limited to subscribing institutions.
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Image sensors

Image processing

Statistical analysis

Modulation transfer functions

Sensors

Detector arrays

Fourier transforms

Back to Top