1st Edition

Ultra-Narrowband Multispectral Imaging Techniques and Applications

By Janis Spigulis Copyright 2025
    104 Pages 49 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    This book provides insight into an unconventional modality of imaging where several spectral images are captured by a single snapshot under multi-laser illumination, ensuring high-speed imaging within extremely narrow spectral bands. This method has three distinct advantages, if compared to common commercial multispectral imaging systems - considerably improved spectral selectivity (or colour sensitivity) of imaging, avoided motion artefacts in the spectral image sets, and simpler/faster image processing as integrals over the spectral bands of imaging are replaced by numbers of the fixed working wavelengths.

    The basic principles and progress in this field are reviewed, focusing on applications for human skin diagnostics and printed forgery detection. The designs of ten different lab-developed prototypes that implement this method are described, along with results of their laboratory, clinical and/or forensic tests. This research leads to the development of new equipment and protocols for better skin diagnostics and the advanced detection of money, document, and artwork forgeries.

    Chapter 1 explains the basics of spectral imaging, including the main principles of multispectral and hyperspectral imaging. Chapter 2 introduces the snapshot multi-spectral-line imaging (SMSLI) method, focusing on lasers as multi-wavelength illumination sources. Chapter 3 describes multi-laser illumination designs while Chapter 4 presents main specifications of the lab-assembled prototype devices implementing such designs. Results of the test measurements confirming applicability of the developed solutions for analysis/mapping of colour pigments in clinical diagnostics and forgery detection are discussed in Chapters 5 and 6, respectively.

    This will be a valuable reference for laser and imaging professionals, photonics researchers and engineers, clinicians (dermatologists, plastic surgeons, oncologists), forensic experts, and students of physics, chemistry, biology, medicine, and engineering.

    Key Features:

    ·         Reviews techniques and applications of narrowband spectral imaging using multi-laser illumination.

    ·         Presents ten different prototypes for implementing the multi-spectral-line imaging method.

    ·         Discusses applications of spectral line imaging for human skin diagnostics and forgery detection.

    Janis Spigulis graduated as physicist from the University of Latvia (UL) in 1973. He defended his Ph.D. thesis on the collisional energy transfer in metal vapor mixtures in 1979 and obtained the Dr.Habil.Phys. degree in 1993 for research on fiber optics and optoelectronics. In 1997 Spigulis established and still leads the Biophotonics Laboratory at Institute of Atomic Physics and Spectroscopy, UL; over the period 2004-2012 he was director of this institute. He has been promoted as Professor (1998), Fellow of SPIE (2011) and academician of Latvian Academy of Sciences (LAS, 2012), recipient of the Grand Medal of LAS (2021). Recent work of Prof. Spigulis aims at developing novel non-invasive optical methods and devices for applications in healthcare and other areas. He has supervised ~40 research projects with results published in >200 scientific papers and protected by >30 patents. Prof. Spigulis has been invited as keynote lecturer, committee member or session chairman at tens of international conferences.

    Introduction. Chapter 1: Basics of spectral imaging. Chapter 2: Snapshot multi-spectral-line imaging. Chapter 3: Multi-laser illumination designs. Chapter 4: Prototype devices for multi-spectral-line imaging. Chapter 5: Applications for skin diagnostics. Chapter 6: Forensic applications. Summary. References. Index.

    Biography

    Janis Spigulis graduated as physicist from the University of Latvia (UL) in 1973. He defended his Ph.D. thesis on the collisional energy transfer in metal vapor mixtures in 1979 and obtained the Dr.Habil.Phys. degree in 1993 for research on fiber optics and optoelectronics. In 1997 Spigulis established and still leads the Biophotonics Laboratory at Institute of Atomic Physics and Spectroscopy, UL; over the period 2004-2012 he was director of this institute. He has been promoted as Professor (1998), Fellow of SPIE (2011) and academician of Latvian Academy of Sciences (LAS, 2012), recipient of the Grand Medal of LAS (2021). Recent work of Prof. Spigulis aims at developing novel non-invasive optical methods and devices for applications in healthcare and other areas. He has supervised ~40 research projects with results published in >200 scientific papers and protected by >30 patents. Prof. Spigulis has been invited as keynote lecturer, committee member or session chairman at tens of international conferences.