PROCEEDINGS OF SPIE. Measuring the image quality of digital-camera sensors by a pingpong

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PROCEEDINGS OF SPIE SPIEDigitalLibrary.org/conference-proceedings-of-spie Measuring the image quality of digital-camera sensors by a pingpong ball Antonio M. Pozo, Manuel Rubiño, José J. Castro, Carlos Salas, Francisco Pérez-Ocón Antonio M. Pozo, Manuel Rubiño, José J. Castro, Carlos Salas, Francisco Pérez-Ocón, "Measuring the image quality of digital-camera sensors by a ping-pong ball," Proc. SPIE 9289, 12th Education and Training in Optics and Photonics Conference, 92892R (17 July 2014); doi: 10.1117/12.2070762 Event: 12th Education and Training in Optics and Photonics Conference, 2013, Porto, Portugal

Measuring the image quality of digital-camera sensors by a ping-pong ball Antonio M. Pozo*, Manuel Rubiño, José J. Castro, Carlos Salas, Francisco Pérez-Ocón Departamento de Óptica, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Granada, Granada 18071, Spain ABSTRACT In this work, we present a low-cost experimental setup to evaluate the image quality of digital-camera sensors, which can be implemented in undergraduate and postgraduate teaching. The method consists of evaluating the modulation transfer function (MTF) of digital-camera sensors by speckle patterns using a ping-pong ball as a diffuser, with two handmade circular apertures acting as input and output ports, respectively. To specify the spatial-frequency content of the speckle pattern, it is necessary to use an aperture; for this, we made a slit in a piece of black cardboard. First, the MTF of a digital-camera sensor was calculated using the ping-pong ball and the handmade slit, and then the MTF was calculated using an integrating sphere and a high-quality steel slit. Finally, the results achieved with both experimental setups were compared, showing a similar MTF in both cases. Keywords: Modulation Transfer Function, Digital cameras, Image sensors, Speckle patterns, Undergraduate teaching, Postgraduate teaching. 1. INTRODUCTION The rapid development of semiconductor technology has facilitated the generalized use of devices to capture images based on matrices of semiconductor detectors, such as CCDs (charge-coupled devices) 1 and CMOS (Complementary Metal-Oxide Semiconductor). 2 Digital cameras are widely used in diverse fields of science and technology as a powerful tool with which to gather information from complex scenes. Examples include quality control in various industrial applications, measurement of the colors of objects, astrophysics, illumination (for characterizing the spatial distribution of light), and artificial vision. The determination of the modulation transfer function (MTF) enables the evaluation of image quality of a system by its spatial-frequency response. 3,4 For measuring the MTF of solid-state cameras, the literature cites different methods that differ essentially in the type of target or pattern used as the object. Thus, for example, methods use bar targets, 5 random targets, 6,7 canted self-imaging targets, 8 and interferometric fringes. 9,10 One of the methods to measure the MTF, established in our laboratory, is based on using a laser-speckle pattern as the object. 11-16 This method is suitable for analyzing the detector independently of the camera lens, given that it does not require a lens to project the pattern. Furthermore, the entire array is tested and the alignment of the system is not critical, since the speckle is positioned randomly in the array of pixels of the image detector. Speckle is an interference phenomenon that occurs when coherent radiation is scattered from a rough surface. Several techniques can be used to generate the speckle pattern, such as different types of transmissive diffusers (ground glass, 11 fused silica, 12 microlens arrays 13 ) or integrating spheres. 14-16 In the latter case, an aperture situated in front of the integrating sphere enables us to specify the spatial-frequency content of the speckle pattern. Two of the apertures used to date are the single-slit 14 and double-slit, 15 both of which present advantages and drawbacks. 16 In this work, we have used a single slit. *ampmolin@ugr.es; phone (34) 958241902; fax (34) 958248533 12th Education and Training in Optics and Photonics Conference, edited by Manuel F. P. C. Martins Costa, Mourad Zghal, Proc. of SPIE Vol. 9289, 92892R 2014 SPIE, OSA, IEEE, ICO doi: 10.1117/12.2070762 Proc. of SPIE Vol. 9289 92892R-1

The aim of this work is to present and experimentally validate a low-cost experimental setup to evaluate the image quality of digital-camera sensors by the MTF, which can be implemented in undergraduate and postgraduate teaching. For this, we used a ping-pong ball as a diffuser to generate speckle patterns, and a slit made in a piece of black cardboard to specify the spatial-frequency content of the speckle pattern. Finally, the results were compared with those found using an integrating sphere and a high-quality steel slit, showing a similar MTF in both cases. 2. THEORETICAL BACKGROUND The relationship between the theoretic power-spectral density known for a single slit (PSD input ) and the measured powerspectral density (PSD output ) allows us to determine the MTF of the image sensor by means of the expression 14 output 2 PSD (, ) MTF(, ) PSD (, ), input (1) where and are the spatial frequencies corresponding to the horizontal and vertical directions x and y, respectively. PSD output is determined from the speckle pattern captured with the image sensor, being proportional to the squared magnitude of the Fourier transform of this speckle pattern. In the case of a rectangular single slit, PSD input is given by 17,18 2 2 z z z PSD input(, ) I (, ) tri tri, ll 12 l1 l 2 (2) where tri( X ) 1 X for X 1 and zero elsewhere, 2 I is the square of the average speckle irradiance of the speckle pattern, (, ) is a delta function, l 1 and l 2 are, respectively, horizontal and vertical dimensions of the single slit, is the wavelength of the laser, and z is the distance between the aperture and image sensor. Given the geometry of the aperture used, PSD input can be separated into frequencies and. In the present work, we consider PSD input( ) and therefore we have determined the horizontal MTF. This can be done in a similar way for the vertical direction to calculate the vertical MTF. 3.1 Experimental setup 3. METHOD Figure 1 presents the experimental device used, composed of a laser diode ( 635 nm; 3mW), a diffuser to generate the speckle pattern, an aperture to specify the spatial-frequency content of the speckle pattern, a polarizer sheet to provide a linearly polarized speckle pattern, and finally the camera under study connected to a control card installed in a personal computer. For the MTF measurement, we used a ping-pong ball as a diffuser, with two handmade circular apertures which acted as input and output ports, respectively. Also, we measured the MTF of the image sensor using an integrating sphere (2 in. inner diameter) to compare the results. For an aperture, we made a rectangular single-slit (3 mm wide and 6 mm high) in a piece of black cardboard. In Section 4 the results are compared with those found using a high-quality steel slit. Proc. of SPIE Vol. 9289 92892R-2

The laser radiation is aimed at the input port of the ping-pong ball, generating the speckle pattern at the output port. The aperture situated at the output port of the ping-pong ball determines the content in spatial frequency of the pattern registered in the detector. Under these conditions, the linear polarizer ensures that the PSD input is given by Eq. (2). With the single slit, the MTF can be determined from a single measurement without the need to move the camera, but it must be situated at a distance from the aperture in such a way that the maximum input spatial frequency is equal to the Nyquist frequency of the image sensor. 12,14 In this way, the MTF can be determined over the largest possible frequency range, and thus aliasing is avoided. Figure 1. Experimental setup for the measurement of the MTF of digital-camera sensors. The distance z between the detector and the single-slit aperture can be calculated by the expression z l 1 (3) Ny where l 1 is the slit width, is the wavelength of the laser, and Ny is the Nyquist spatial frequency of the image sensor in the horizontal direction. For a detector array with a centre-to-centre spacing between the photoelements, x, the Nyquist frequency is given by 1 2 x Ny (4) The camera used was a 12-bit monochrome Atmos Areascan 1M30, with a CMOS sensor which had 1312(H)x1024 (V) pixels. In this case the sensor pixel-pitch was 5 m in the horizontal as well as in the vertical direction, corresponding to a Nyquist frequency of 100 cycles/mm given by Eq. (4). Taking into account the width of the single slit and the Nyquist frequency, we can calculate the distance z between the sensor and the aperture by using Eq. (3). In our case, this distance was z=47 mm. Proc. of SPIE Vol. 9289 92892R-3

3.2 Data processing Once the detector was set at the corresponding distance from the single-slit aperture, as indicated in Section 3.1, the PSD output( ) was determined in the following way. For a given digitized frame of speckle data (Figure 2), each horizontal row of data is a single observation of an ergodic random process. A fast Fourier transform (FFT), which is a discrete Fourier transform, was performed on each row of speckle data. The magnitude squared in one dimension provided a single estimate of the one-dimensional power spectrum, PSD output( ). These spectra were averaged, for a better signal-to-noise ratio in the PSD output( ). 19 To reduce the noise even further, the average was taken for 10 frames. The frames were stored in tiff format without compression. When a FFT is performed on a dataset of length N, the Nyquist frequency appears at the N/2 component of the FFT output. A ratio can be formed to evaluate the spatial frequency n that corresponds to the nth component as 16 Ny N/2 n n (5) Equation (5) associates frequencies between zero and the Nyquist frequency with FFT components from 0 to the N/2 component. In this work, we used N=1024, and therefore the total number of spatial frequencies within the range from 0 to the Nyquist frequency of the detector was 512. Before processing, each digitized frame of speckle data was corrected in order to reduce effects due to the spatial noise of the sensor itself. With respect to the spatial noise of an image sensor, a distinction can be made between the fixedpattern noise (FPN) and the photoresponse non-uniformity (PRNU). The FPN refers to the pixel-to-pixel variation that occurs when the array is in the dark, and thus it is signal-independent noise. The PRNU is due to the difference in response of each pixel to a given uniform signal and therefore is signal-dependent noise. The FPN was corrected by subtracting from the speckle image the dark image captured by obscuring the detector and the PRNU, by means of the procedure proposed elsewhere. 11 For the image processing, the necessary software was developed using MATLAB. Figure 2. Speckle pattern photographed with the CMOS camera using the high-quality slit together with the ping-pong ball as a diffuser. Proc. of SPIE Vol. 9289 92892R-4

4. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION Figure 3 shows the output PSD fit and the output PSD values calculated from the speckle pattern shown in Fig. 2. Figure 3. Output PSD values and fit for the CMOS image-sensor calculated from the speckle pattern shown in Fig. 2. The PSD output experimental values were fitted to the following function: A1 A2 PSD( ) A2 ( 0 )/ 1 e (6) where A 1, A 2, 0, and coefficients are provided by the fit. In the case of Figure 3, the fit regression coefficient, R 2, was 0.9969. In a similar way the PSD fits were calculated for the other cases. Figure 4 compares the MTF of the CMOS image-sensor using the integrating sphere and the ping-pong ball. Figure 4. MTF of the CMOS image-sensor using the integrating sphere and the ping-pong ball. In both cases the highquality steel slit was used as an aperture. Proc. of SPIE Vol. 9289 92892R-5

In the two cases shown in Fig. 4, the high-quality steel slit was used as an aperture. The MTF measured with the pingpong ball was similar to that determined with the integrating sphere, considering the uncertainty of the method. 20 To investigate the influence of the slit on the MTF, we cut a slit into a sheet of black cardboard. Figure 5 compares the results achieved with the high-quality steel slit and with the handmade cardboard slit, showing similar MTF values. In both cases, the integrating sphere was used as a diffuser. Figure 5. MTF of the CMOS image-sensor using the high-quality steel slit and the handmade cardboard slit. In both cases the integrating sphere was used as a diffuser. Finally, the MTF of the digital-camera sensor was calculated using the ping-pong ball and the handmade slit, and then was calculated using the integrating sphere and the high-quality steel slit. The results achieved with both experimental setups were compared, showing a similar MTF in both cases (Figure 6). Figure 6. MTF of the CMOS image-sensor using two different experimental setup: the integrating sphere with the highquality steel slit, and the ping-pong ball with the cardboard slit. Proc. of SPIE Vol. 9289 92892R-6

5. CONCLUSIONS In this work, we have presented a low-cost experimental setup to evaluate the image quality of digital-camera sensors, which can be implemented in undergraduate and postgraduate teaching. The method consists of evaluating the modulation transfer function (MTF) of digital-camera sensors by speckle patterns using a ping-pong ball as a diffuser and a handmade slit in a sheet of black cardboard; the slit situated in front of the output port of the ping-pong ball determines the content in spatial frequency of the speckle pattern photographed by the digital camera. The experimental setup is composed of the digital camera under study, a laser diode, a polarizer sheet, the handmade slit, and the pingpong ball with two handmade circular apertures which act as an input and output ports, respectively. The MTF of a digital-camera sensor was calculated using the ping-pong ball and the handmade slit, and then the MTF was calculated using an integrating sphere and a high-quality steel slit. The results achieved with both experimental setups were compared, showing a similar MTF in both cases. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The authors express their appreciation to the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación for financing project FIS2011-25724 and David Nesbitt for correcting the English text. REFERENCES [1] Holst, G. C., CCD Arrays, Cameras, and Displays, SPIE Optical Engineering Press, Bellingham, Washington (1996). [2] Yadid-Pecht, O. and Etienne-Cummings, R. (Eds.), CMOS Imagers: From Phototransduction to Image Processing, Kluwer Academic Publishers, Boston (2004). [3] Feltz, J. C. and Karim, M. A., Modulation transfer function of charge-coupled devices, Appl. Opt. 29(5), 717 722 (1990). [4] Park, S. K., Schowengerdt, R. and Kaczynski, M-A., Modulation transfer-function analysis for sampled image systems, Appl. Opt. 23(15), 2572 2582 (1984). [5] Sitter, D. N. Jr., Goddard, J. S. and Ferrell, R. K., Method for the measurement of the modulation transfer function of sampled imaging systems from bar-target patterns, Appl. Opt. 34(4), 746 751 (1995). [6] Daniels, A., Boreman, G. D., Ducharme, A. D. and Sapir, E., Random transparency targets for modulation transfer function measurement in the visible and infrared regions, Opt. Eng. 34(3), 860 868 (1995). [7] Backman, S. M., Makynen, A. J., Kolehmainen, T. T. and Ojala, K. M., Random target method for fast MTF inspection, Opt. Express 12(12), 2610 2615 (2004). [8] Guérineau, N., Primot, J, Tauvy, M. and Caes, M., Modulation transfer function measurement of an infrared focal plane array by use of the self-imaging property of a canted periodic target, Appl. Opt. 38(4), 631 637 (1999). [9] Marchywka, M. and Socker, D. G., Modulation transfer function measurement techniques for small-pixel detectors, Appl. Opt. 31(34), 7198 7213 (1992). [10] Greivenkamp, J. E. and Lowman, A. E., Modulation transfer function measurements of sparse-array sensors using a self-calibrating fringe pattern, Appl. Opt. 33(22), 5029 5036 (1994). [11] Pozo, A. M., Ferrero, A., Rubiño, M., Campos, J. and Pons, A., Improvements for determining the modulation transfer function of charge-coupled devices by the speckle method, Opt. Express 14(13), 5928 5936 (2006). [12] Boreman, G. D. and Dereniak, E. L., Method for measuring modulation transfer function of charge-coupled devices using laser speckle, Opt. Eng. 25(1), 148 150 (1986). [13] Ducharme, A. D., Microlens diffusers for efficient laser speckle generation, Opt. Express 15(22), 14573 14579 (2007). [14] Boreman, G. D., Sun, Y. and James, A. B., Generation of laser speckle with an integrating sphere, Opt. Eng. 29(4), 339 342 (1990). [15] Sensiper, M., Boreman, G. D., Ducharme, A. D. and Snyder, D. R., Modulation transfer function testing of detector arrays using narrowband laser speckle, Opt. Eng. 32(2), 395 400 (1993). Proc. of SPIE Vol. 9289 92892R-7

[16] Pozo, A. M. and Rubiño, M., Comparative analysis of techniques for measuring the modulation transfer functions of charge-coupled devices based on the generation of laser speckle, Appl. Opt. 44(9), 1543 1547 (2005). [17] Goodman, J. W., Statistical properties of laser speckle and related phenomena, in Laser Speckle and Related Phenomena, Dainty, J. C., ed., Vol. 9 of Topics in Applied Physics, Springer-Verlag, Berlin (1984). [18] Goldfischer, L. I., Autocorrelation function and power spectral density of laser-produced speckle patterns, J. Opt. Soc. Am. 55(3), 247 253 (1965). [19] Boreman, G. D., Fourier spectrum techniques for characterization of spatial noise in imaging arrays, Opt. Eng. 26(10), 985 991 (1987). [20] Fernández-Oliveras, A., Pozo, A. M. and Rubiño, M., Speckle-Based Modulation Transfer Function Measurements for Comparative Evaluation of CCD and CMOS Detector Arrays, Optical Review 20 (1), 41-49 (2013). Proc. of SPIE Vol. 9289 92892R-8