Abstract

Thin-film diffractive optical elements (DOEs) have considerable potential to be used in the field of high-resolution remote sensing imaging satellites because of advantages such as a large aperture, small volume, lightness, wide tolerance range of surface shape, and easy replication. However, there are problems associated with thin-film diffraction imaging, including space variation, serious blur, and low contrast, which result in insufficient imaging quality with regard to traditional optical system requirements. To address this, a local adaptive prior-based image restoration method is proposed for thin-film diffraction imaging systems. An entire degraded image was divided into several isohalo regions based on imaging characteristics. Then, the regularization constraints were adaptively selected and updated according to the local scene prior characteristics. Additionally, the system parameters in the corresponding field of view were used as input to restore each subregion. In particular, the diffraction efficiency (DIE) was introduced into the model to remove the nondesign level background radiation. The experimental results show that the proposed algorithm can effectively improve the image quality of a thin-film diffraction imaging system, including space variation correction, clarity enhancement, and background radiation suppression. Furthermore, a DIE of less than 60% was found to significantly impact the final image products.

Full Text
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