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A single sensor based multispectral imaging camera using a narrow spectral band color mosaic integrated on the monochrome CMOS image sensor
Author(s) -
Xin He,
Yajing Liu,
Kumar Ganesan,
Arman Ahnood,
Paul Beckett,
F. Eftekhari,
Dan Smith,
Md Hemayet Uddin,
Efstratios Skafidas,
Ampalavanapillai Nirmalathas,
Ranjith Rajasekharan Unnithan
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
apl photonics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.094
H-Index - 34
ISSN - 2378-0967
DOI - 10.1063/1.5140215
Subject(s) - multispectral image , monochrome , color filter array , image sensor , optics , artificial intelligence , cmos sensor , computer vision , computer science , multispectral pattern recognition , interference filter , pixel , color image , filter (signal processing) , wavelength , color gel , image processing , materials science , physics , image (mathematics) , thin film transistor , layer (electronics) , composite material
A multispectral image camera captures image data within specific wavelength ranges in narrow wavelength bands across the electromagnetic spectrum. Images from a multispectral camera can extract a additional information that the human eye or a normal camera fails to capture and thus may have important applications in precision agriculture, forestry, medicine, and object identification. Conventional multispectral cameras are made up of multiple image sensors each fitted with a narrow passband wavelength filter and optics, which makes them heavy, bulky, power hungry, and very expensive. The multiple optics also create an image co-registration problem. Here, we demonstrate a single sensor based three band multispectral camera using a narrow spectral band red–green–blue color mosaic in a Bayer pattern integrated on a monochrome CMOS sensor. The narrow band color mosaic is made of a hybrid combination of plasmonic color filters and a heterostructured dielectric multilayer. The demonstrated camera technology has reduced cost, weight, size, and power by almost n times (where n is the number of bands) compared to a conventional multispectral camera.

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