Spectrum from Defocus: Fast Spectral Imaging with Chromatic Focal Stack
Abstract
Hyperspectral cameras rely on spectral filters, dispersive optics, or coded apertures, which reduce light throughput and increase hardware complexity. These systems face harsh trade-offs between spatial, spectral, and temporal resolution in inherently low-photon conditions. Computational imaging systems break through these trade-offs with compressive sensing, but have typically required complex optics and/or extensive computation. We present Spectrum from Defocus (SfD), a chromatic focal sweep method that achieves state-of-the-art hyperspectral imaging using only two off-the-shelf lenses, a grayscale sensor, and less than one second of reconstruction time. By capturing a chromatically-aberrated focal stack that preserves nearly all incident light, and reconstructing it with a fast physics-based iterative algorithm, SfD delivers sharp, accurate hyperspectral images. The combination of photon efficiency, optical simplicity, and physical interpretability makes SfD a promising solution for fast, compact, and interpretable hyperspectral imaging.