Forums before death by AOL, social media and spammers... "We can't have nice things"
|    sci.optics    |    Discussion relating to the science of op    |    12,750 messages    |
[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]
|    Message 12,481 of 12,750    |
|    Helpful person to adamstr...@gmail.com    |
|    Re: Help needed in extracting signal fro    |
|    29 Mar 20 12:23:52    |
      From: rrllff@yahoo.com              On Wednesday, December 18, 2019 at 11:17:49 AM UTC-5, adamstr...@gmail.com       wrote:       > I'm trying to form a gray-scale image of a scene by scanning it with a laser       in daylight.        >        > The setup is, I stare at the entire scene with a stationary lens and a       single photodetector (and this does not scan, but takes in the entire scene),       and then I scan a laser spot across the scene to build up a rastered image.       > The light contribution from the entire background is 8000X brighter than the       light from the laser spot.       > I have heard that it is possible to extract faint signals from a noisy       background by modulating the signal (the laser spot) and extracting the       matching frequency components from the noise, which sounds crazy to me       because, well, the noise is 8000X        greater than the signal, and any detector is going to have a hard time seeing,       say, 1000 photons on top of 8,000,000.       >        > What am I missing? I'm not a signal-processing guy, if that wasn't obvious       already.       >        > Can modulating the laser spot enable me to build up a grayscale image of the       scene, and if so, how, or should I take a different approach?              A much better solution is to scan the laser and detector together. Combine       them with a beam splitter, add a lens and then scan.              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]
(c) 1994, bbs@darkrealms.ca