Publication | Closed Access
Diffuse Mirrors: 3D Reconstruction from Diffuse Indirect Illumination Using Inexpensive Time-of-Flight Sensors
172
Citations
20
References
2014
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringFunctional DifferenceComputational IlluminationDiffuse MirrorsIllumination ModelingImage AnalysisReflection RemovalOptical PropertiesComputational ImagingPhotometric StereoComputational PhotographyOptical SystemsTime-of-flight ImagingLight Field ImagingMachine VisionTime-of-flight CameraInverse ProblemsComputer VisionDiffuse WallObject Shape
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.
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