Streak cameras, essential for ultrahigh temporal resolution diagnostics in laser-driven inertial confinement fusion, underpin the streak tube imaging LiDAR (STIL) system—a flash LiDAR technology offering high spatiotemporal resolution, precise ranging, enhanced sensitivity, and wide field of view. This study establishes a theoretical model of the STIL system, with numerical simulations predicting limits of temporal and spatial resolutions of ~6 ps and 22.8 lp/mm, respectively. Dynamic simulations of laser backscatter signals from targets at varying depths demonstrate an optimal distance reconstruction accuracy of 98%. An experimental STIL platform was developed, with the key parameters calibrated as follows: scanning speed (16.78 ps/pixel), temporal resolution (14.47 ps), and central cathode spatial resolution (20 lp/mm). The system achieved target imaging through streak camera detection of azimuth-resolved intensity profiles, generating raw streak images. Feature extraction and neural network-based three-dimensional (3D) reconstruction algorithms enabled target reconstruction from the time-of-flight data of short laser pulses, achieving a minimum distance reconstruction error of 3.57%. Experimental results validate the capability of the system to detect fast, low-intensity optical signals while acquiring target range information, ultimately achieving high-frame-rate, high-resolution 3D imaging. These advancements position STIL technology as a promising solution for applications that require micron-scale depth discrimination under dynamic conditions.
Cai et al. (Thu,) studied this question.