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Roadmap on computational methods in optical imaging and holography [invited]

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posted on 2024-09-25, 05:43 authored by J Rosen, S Alford, B Allan, V Anand, S Arnon, FG Arockiaraj, J Art, B Bai, GM Balasubramaniam, T Birnbaum, NS Bisht, D Blinder, L Cao, Q Chen, Z Chen, V Dubey, K Egiazarian, M Ercan, A Forbes, G Gopakumar, Y Gao, S Gigan, P Gocłowski, S Gopinath, A Greenbaum, R Horisaki, Daniel IerodiaconouDaniel Ierodiaconou, S Juodkazis, T Karmakar, V Katkovnik, SN Khonina, P Kner, V Kravets, R Kumar, Y Lai, C Li, J Li, S Li, Y Li, J Liang, G Manavalan, AC Mandal, M Manisha, C Mann, MJ Marzejon, C Moodley, J Morikawa, I Muniraj, D Narbutis, SH Ng, F Nothlawala, J Oh, A Ozcan, YK Park, AP Porfirev, M Potcoava, S Prabhakar, J Pu, MR Rai, M Rogalski, M Ryu, S Choudhary, GR Salla, P Schelkens, SF Şener, I Shevkunov, T Shimobaba, RK Singh, RP Singh, A Stern, J Sun, S Zhou, C Zuo, Z Zurawski, T Tahara, V Tiwari, M Trusiak, RV Vinu, SG Volotovskiy, H Yılmaz, HB De Aguiar, BS Ahluwalia, A Ahmad
AbstractComputational methods have been established as cornerstones in optical imaging and holography in recent years. Every year, the dependence of optical imaging and holography on computational methods is increasing significantly to the extent that optical methods and components are being completely and efficiently replaced with computational methods at low cost. This roadmap reviews the current scenario in four major areas namely incoherent digital holography, quantitative phase imaging, imaging through scattering layers, and super-resolution imaging. In addition to registering the perspectives of the modern-day architects of the above research areas, the roadmap also reports some of the latest studies on the topic. Computational codes and pseudocodes are presented for computational methods in a plug-and-play fashion for readers to not only read and understand but also practice the latest algorithms with their data. We believe that this roadmap will be a valuable tool for analyzing the current trends in computational methods to predict and prepare the future of computational methods in optical imaging and holography.

History

Journal

Applied Physics B: Lasers and Optics

Volume

130

Article number

166

Location

London, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

0946-2171

eISSN

1432-0649

Language

en

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

9

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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