The acquisition of nighttime remote-sensing visible-light images is often accompanied by low-illumination effects and haze interference, resulting in significant image quality degradation and greatly affecting subsequent applications. Existing low-light enhancement and dehazing algorithms can handle each problem individually, but their simple cascade cannot effectively address unknown real-world degradations. Therefore, we design a joint processing framework, WFDiff, which fully exploits the advantages of Fourier–wavelet dual-domain features and innovatively integrates the inverse diffusion process through differentiable operators to construct a multi-scale degradation collaborative correction system. Specifically, in the reverse diffusion process, a dual-domain feature interaction module is designed, and the joint probability distribution of the generated image and real data is constrained through differentiable operators: on the one hand, a global frequency-domain prior is established by jointly constraining Fourier amplitude and phase, effectively maintaining the radiometric consistency of the image; on the other hand, wavelets are used to capture high-frequency details and edge structures in the spatial domain to improve the prediction process. On this basis, a cross-overlapping-block adaptive smoothing estimation algorithm is proposed, which achieves dynamic fusion of multi-scale features through a differentiable weighting strategy, effectively solving the problem of restoring images of different sizes and avoiding local inconsistencies. In view of the current lack of remote-sensing data for low-light haze scenarios, we constructed the Hazy-Dark dataset. Physical experiments and ablation experiments show that the proposed method outperforms existing single-task or simple cascade methods in terms of image fidelity, detail recovery capability, and visual naturalness, providing a new paradigm for remote-sensing image processing under coupled degradations.
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Jiaxin Wu
Shenzhen University
Han Ai
China Academy of Space Technology
Zhou Ping
China Astronaut Research and Training Center
Remote Sensing
Chinese Academy of Sciences
University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
Xi'an Institute of Optics and Precision Mechanics
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Wu et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68af63e9ad7bf08b1eae48fa — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17172944
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