Paper
31 May 2013 Low-light NV-CMOS image sensors for day/night imaging
T. Vogelsong, J. Tower, T. Senko, P. Levine, J. Janesick, J. Zhu, D. Zhang, G. van der Wal, M. Piacentino
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Traditionally, daylight and night vision imaging systems have required image intensifiers plus daytime cameras. But SRI’s new NV-CMOS™ image sensor technology is designed to capture images over the full range of illumination from bright sunlight to starlight. SRI’s NV-CMOS image sensors provide the low light sensitivity approaching that of an analog image intensifier tube with the cost, power, ruggedness, flexibility and convenience of a digital CMOS imager chip. NV-CMOS provides multi-megapixels at video frame rates with low noise (<2 h+), high sensitivity across the visible and near infrared (NIR) bands (peak QE <85%), high resolution (MTF at Nyquist < 50% @ 650 nm), and extended dynamic range (<75 dB). The latest test data from the NV-CMOS imager technology will be presented.

Unlike conventional image intensifiers, the NV-CMOS image sensor outputs a digital signal, ideal for recording or sharing video as well as fusion with thermal imagery. The result is a substantial reduction in size and weight, ideal for SWaP-constrained missions such as UAVs and mobile operations. SRI’s motion adaptive noise reduction processing further increases the sensitivity and reduces image smear. Enhancement of moving targets in imagery captured under extreme low light conditions imposes difficult challenges. SRI has demonstrated that image registration provides a robust solution for enhancing global scene contrast under very low SNR conditions.

© (2013) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
T. Vogelsong, J. Tower, T. Senko, P. Levine, J. Janesick, J. Zhu, D. Zhang, G. van der Wal, and M. Piacentino "Low-light NV-CMOS image sensors for day/night imaging", Proc. SPIE 8713, Airborne Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance (ISR) Systems and Applications X, 87130F (31 May 2013); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2016396
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Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
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KEYWORDS
Signal to noise ratio

Sensors

Imaging systems

Interference (communication)

Modulation transfer functions

Image sensors

Quantum efficiency

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