Abstract

Multi-camera flow diagnostics have made large gains in recent years in the field of three-dimensional and multi-physics measurements. However, cost, complexity and optical access pose challenges that place multi-camera techniques out of reach for many labs. In that context, light-field (LF) imaging represents an alternative approach that can potentially alleviate some of these challenges. LF flow diagnostics is a branch of measurement techniques introduced within the last decade that are based on a plenoptic camera’s unique ability to capture three-dimensional and multi-spectral data via a single objective lens and image sensor-albeit at reduced lateral resolutions and depth-to-lateral uncertainty ratios of 3–10 due to limited parallax angle. Thus far, LF flow diagnostics have successfully achieved significant camera-reduction alongside other performance improvements in 3D flow velocimetry, 3D particle tracking, 3D scalar-field tomography, micro-fluidic velocimetry and multi-spectral imaging, as well as early demonstrations of single-camera multi-physics measurements for applications such as 3D fluid-structure interactions. Here, we discuss the state of development in LF flow diagnostics, highlight on-going challenges, and project potential advancements in the near future.

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