Abstract

This paper discusses a modular implementation of synthetic aperture interferometry (SAI) using inexpensive telecommunications technologies that can be expanded for use in optical instruments with arbitrarily large fields of view. Exploiting multiple image sensors and multiple illumination sources, transmission and reflection SAI geometries, capable of emulating the phase contrast and interference modes of conventional interference microscopes, are considered. The point-spread and transfer characteristics of these geometries are illustrated for the case of a transmission mode instrument. It is shown that although imaging is strictly field dependent (i.e. shift-variant), the response of modular instruments is periodic and with careful choice of illumination and sensor positioning can be made quasi shift-invariant. We demonstrate SAI in a transmission configuration comprising of a single coherent imager that holographically records the field scattered from a test target sequentially illuminated by 16 different plane waves. This set-up is equivalent to a single module of a larger SAI system and since brightfield regions in the individual reconstructed images overlap, provides an ideal platform to examine the effect of tilt and phase offset errors in the illumination. By applying a first order correction and assuming phase continuity over the overlapping regions, we demonstrate a significant improvement in the SAI reconstruction.

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