Photonics (May 2024)
Study on the Robustness of an Atmospheric Scattering Model under Single Transmittance
Abstract
When light propagates in a scattering medium such as haze, it is partially scattered and absorbed, resulting in a decrease in the intensity of the light emitted by the imaging target and an increase in the intensity of the scattered light. This phenomenon leads to a significant reduction in the quality of images taken in hazy environments. To describe the physical process of image degradation in haze, the atmospheric scattering model is proposed. However, the accuracy of the model applied to the usual fog image restoration is affected by many factors. In general, fog images, atmospheric light, and haze transmittances vary spatially, which makes it difficult to calculate the influence of the accuracy of parameters in the model on the recovery accuracy. In this paper, the atmospheric scattering model was applied to the restoration of hazed images with a single transmittance. We acquired hazed images with a single transmittance from 0.05 to 1 using indoor experiments. The dehazing stability of the atmospheric scattering model was investigated by adjusting the atmospheric light and transmittance parameters. For each transmittance, the relative recovery accuracy of atmospheric light and transmittance were calculated when they deviated from the optimal value of 0.1, respectively. The maximum parameter estimation deviations allowed us to obtain the best recovery accuracies of 90%, 80%, and 70%.
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