Abstract

When a remote sensing camera work in push-broom mode, the obtained image usually contains significant stripe noise and random noise due to differences in detector response and environmental factors. Traditional approaches typically treat them as two independent problems and process the image sequentially, which not only increases the risk of information loss and structural damage, but also faces the situation of noise mutual influence. To overcome the drawbacks of traditional methods, this paper leverages the double low-rank characteristics in the underlying prior of degraded images and presents a novel approach for addressing both destriping and denoising tasks simultaneously. We utilize the commonality that both can be treated as inverse problems and place them in the same optimization framework, while designing an alternating direction method of multipliers (ADMM) strategy for solving them, achieving the synchronous removal of both stripe noise and random noise. Compared with traditional approaches, synchronous denoising technology can more accurately evaluate the distribution characteristics of noise, better utilize the original information of the image, and achieve better destriping and denoising results. To assess the efficacy of the proposed algorithm, extensive simulations and experiments were conducted in this paper. The results show that compared with state-of-the-art algorithms, the proposed method can more effectively suppress random noise, achieve better synchronous denoising results, and it exhibits a stronger robustness.

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