Jianchang Mao, Patrick J. Flynn, et al.
Computer Vision and Image Understanding
A description is given of a modeling technique that is used to explore three-dimensional image distributions formed by high numerical aperture (NA > 0.6) lenses in homogeneous, isotropic, linear, and source-free thin films. The approach is based on a plane-wave decomposition in the exit pupil. Factors that are due to polarization, aberration, object transmittance, propagation, and phase terms are associated with each planewave component. These are combined with a modified thin-film matrix technique in a derivation of the total field amplitude at each point in the film by a coherent vector sum over all plane waves. One then calculates the image distribution by squaring the electric-field amplitude. The model is used to show how asymmetries present in the polarized image change with the influence of a thin film. Extensions of the model to magneto-optic thin films are discussed. © 1996 Optical Society of America.
Jianchang Mao, Patrick J. Flynn, et al.
Computer Vision and Image Understanding
Cen Rao, Alexei Gritai, et al.
ICCV 2003
Alex Cozzi, Florentin Wörgötter
IJCV
Ritwik Kumar, Arunava Banerjee, et al.
IEEE TPAMI