Epipolar Time-of-Flight Imaging
Abstract
Consumer time-of-flight depth cameras like Kinect and PMD are cheap, compact and produce video-rate depth maps in short-range applications. In this paper we apply energy-efficient epipolar imaging to the ToF domain to significantly expand the versatility of these sensors: we demonstrate live 3D imaging at over 15 m range outdoors in bright sunlight; robustness to global transport effects such as specular and diffuse inter-reflections---the first live demonstration for this ToF technology; interference-free 3D imaging in the presence of many ToF sensors, even when they are all operating at the same optical wavelength and modulation frequency; and blur-free, distortion-free 3D video in the presence of severe camera shake. We believe these achievements can make such cheap ToF devices broadly applicable in consumer and robotics domains.
BibTeX
@article{Achar-2017-120191,author = {S. Achar and J. Bartels and W. L. Whittaker and K. N. Kutulakos and S. G. Narasimhan},
title = {Epipolar Time-of-Flight Imaging},
journal = {ACM Transactions on Graphics (TOG)},
year = {2017},
month = {July},
volume = {36},
number = {4},
}