High-flux single-photon lidar

Abstract

In time-correlated single-photon counting (TCSPC), photons that arrive during the detector and timing electronics dead times are missed, causing distortion of the detection time distribution. Conventional wisdom holds that TCSPC should be performed with detections in fewer than 5% of illumination cycles to avoid substantial distortion. This requires attenuation and leads to longer acquisition times if the incident flux is too high. Through the example of ranging with a single-photon lidar system, this work demonstrates that accurately modeling the sequence of detection times as a Markov chain allows for measurements at much higher incident flux without attenuation. Our probabilistic model is validated by the close match between the limiting distribution of the Markov chain and both simulated and experimental data, so long as issues of calibration and afterpulsing are minimal. We propose an algorithm that corrects for the distortion in detection histograms caused by dead times without assumptions on the form of the transient light intensity. Our histogram correction yields substantially improved depth imaging performance, and modest additional improvement is achieved with a parametric model assuming a single depth per pixel. We show results for depth and flux estimation with up to 5 photoelectrons per illumination cycle on average, facilitating an increase in time efficiency of more than two orders of magnitude. The use of identical TCSPC equipment in other fields suggests that our modeling and histogram correction could likewise enable high-flux acquisitions in fluorescence lifetime microscopy or quantum optics applications.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Jan 06, 2021
Source ID
10.1364/optica.403190

Entities

People

  • Joshua Rapp
  • Robin M A Dawson
  • Vivek K Goyal
  • Yanting Ma

Organizations

  • Charles Stark Draper Laboratory
  • Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
  • Google
  • National Science Foundation

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Physics

Readers

  • Computer Vision.
  • Educational Psychology
  • Quantum Dot Semiconductor Device Photonics and Graphene Optoelectronic Materials and THz Physics.

Technology Areas

  • Microelectronics
  • Quantum Computing