Krill-eye : Superposition Compound Eye for Wide-Angle Imaging via GRIN Lenses

Shinsaku Hiura(*1) Ankit Mohan Ramesh Raskar
MIT Media Lab
(*1) now at Osaka University Hiroshima City University

OMNIVIS2009
IPSJ Trans. CVA

Abstract

We propose a novel wide angle imaging system inspired by compound eyes of animals. Instead of using a single lens, well compensated for aberration, we used a number of simple lenses to form a compound eye which produces practically distortion-free, uniform images with angular variation. The images formed by the multiple lenses are superposed on a single surface for increased light efficiency. We use GRIN~(gradient refractive index) lenses to create sharply focused images without the artifacts seen when using reflection based methods for X-ray astronomy. We show the theoretical constraints for forming a blur-free image on the image sensor, and derive a continuum between $1:1$ flat optics for document scanners and curved sensors focused at infinity. Finally, we show a practical application of the proposed optics in a beacon to measure the relative rotation angle between the light source and the camera with ID information.

Paper

High resolution paper (~2.7MB)

Representative movie


(mpeg-1 with audio, 3min)

Supplemental materials


Image quality evaluation by simulation


Rotation angle estimation using Krill-eye Beacon