Abstract:
The functional difference between a diffuse wall and a mirror is well understood: one scatters back into all directions, and the other one preserves the directionality of...Show MoreMetadata
Abstract:
The functional difference between a diffuse wall and a mirror is well understood: one scatters back into all directions, and the other one preserves the directionality of reflected light. The temporal structure of the light, however, is left intact by both: assuming simple surface reflection, photons that arrive first are reflected first. In this paper, we exploit this insight to recover objects outside the line of sight from second-order diffuse reflections, effectively turning walls into mirrors. We formulate the reconstruction task as a linear inverse problem on the transient response of a scene, which we acquire using an affordable setup consisting of a modulated light source and a time-of-flight image sensor. By exploiting sparsity in the reconstruction domain, we achieve resolutions in the order of a few centimeters for object shape (depth and laterally) and albedo. Our method is robust to ambient light and works for large room-sized scenes. It is drastically faster and less expensive than previous approaches using femtosecond lasers and streak cameras, and does not require any moving parts.
Date of Conference: 23-28 June 2014
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 25 September 2014
Electronic ISBN:978-1-4799-5118-5
ISSN Information:
The University of British Columbia
The University of British Columbia
King Abdullah University of Science and Technology
The University of British Columbia
University of Bonn
The University of British Columbia
The University of British Columbia
King Abdullah University of Science and Technology
The University of British Columbia
University of Bonn