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Electro-Optical Design for Efficient Visual CommunicationVisual communication, in the form of telephotography and television, for example, can be regarded as efficient only if the amount of information that it conveys about the scene to the observer approaches the maximum possible and the associated cost approaches the minimum possible. Elsewhere we have addressed the problem of assessing the end to end performance of visual communication systems in terms of their efficiency in this sense by integrating the critical limiting factors that constrain image gathering into classical communications theory. We use this approach to assess the electro-optical design of image gathering devices as a function of the f number and apodization of the objective lens and the aperture size and sampling geometry of the phot-detection mechanism. Results show that an image gathering device that is designed to optimize information capacity performs similarly to the human eye. For both, the performance approaches the maximum possible, in terms of the efficiency with which the acquired information can be transmitted as decorrelated data, and the fidelity, sharpness, and clearity with which fine detail can be restored.
Document ID
19970009393
Acquisition Source
Langley Research Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Huck, Friedrich O.
(NASA Langley Research Center Hampton, VA United States)
Fales, Carl L.
(NASA Langley Research Center Hampton, VA United States)
Jobson, Daniel J.
(NASA Langley Research Center Hampton, VA United States)
Rahman, Zia-Ur
(Science and Technology Corp. Hampton, VA United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
March 1, 1995
Publication Information
Publication: Optical Engineering
Publisher: International Society for Optical Engineering
Volume: 34
Issue: 3
ISSN: 0091-3286
Subject Category
Communications And Radar
Report/Patent Number
NASA-TM-112167
NAS 1.15:112167
Report Number: NASA-TM-112167
Report Number: NAS 1.15:112167
ISSN: 0091-3286
Accession Number
97N14878
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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