Acta Optica Sinica, Volume. 35, Issue 8, 811003(2015)

Hyperspectral Compressed Sensing Based on Prior Images Constrained

Tan Shiyu*, Liu Zhentao, Li Enrong, and Han Shensheng
Author Affiliations
  • [in Chinese]
  • show less

    When the sampling ratio and signal- to- noise ratio (SNR) is low, the noise of multispectral image increases, quality of the reconstructed images inevitably degrades. In order to improve the quality of multispectral image, a new prior image constrains hyperspectral compressed sensing (PICHCS) method is proposed. The spatial and spectral correlations in hyperspectral imaging is exploited in PICHCS to reconstruct the primitive images. Prior images obtained by averaging the adjacent spectral primitive images are used as constraints for the compressed sensing image reconstruction. By subtracting each target image with the corresponding prior image, the obtained difference images are expected to sparse and reconstructing the difference images, some of the high SNR characteristics of the prior image are retained in the reconstructions. The feasibility of the method is verified by numerical simulations and experiments. Comparative studies are made for reconstructions obtained with the total variation and low rank joint algorithm and those with PICHCS under different sampling ratios and SNRs. The results indicate that PICHCS improve reconstruction quality of hyperspectral images from a low sampling ratio or SNR dataset, which can reduce the requirement of sampling ratios and the system SNR.

    Tools

    Get Citation

    Copy Citation Text

    Tan Shiyu, Liu Zhentao, Li Enrong, Han Shensheng. Hyperspectral Compressed Sensing Based on Prior Images Constrained[J]. Acta Optica Sinica, 2015, 35(8): 811003

    Download Citation

    EndNote(RIS)BibTexPlain Text
    Save article for my favorites
    Paper Information

    Category: Imaging Systems

    Received: Mar. 2, 2015

    Accepted: --

    Published Online: Aug. 10, 2015

    The Author Email: Shiyu Tan (tanshy@mail.siom.ac.cn)

    DOI:10.3788/aos201535.0811003

    Topics