How It Works

  1. Alternating Lines
    • The sensor designates even-numbered lines (0, 2, 4, …) for Image A and odd-numbered lines (1, 3, 5, …) for Image B.
  2. Interleaved Readout
    • During readout, the sensor outputs the lines in alternating order (A-line, B-line, A-line, B-line) in a single scan.
  3. Frame Reconstruction
    • Each full image is reconstructed by combining only the even or odd lines into its respective frame.
    • Because both sets are acquired during the same total frame time, you get two complete images per frame time.

Why It Doubles Frame Rate

  • In a normal sequential capture:
    • You’d capture Frame 1 (all lines for Image A) → Frame 2 (all lines for Image B).
    • This takes 2× the time.
  • In line interleave mode:
    • You capture both images simultaneously in a single frame period.
    • This yields 2× the frame rate for each image stream.

Advantages

  • Higher Temporal Resolution – Great for high-speed experiments where timing between two image streams must be minimal.
  • Synchronized Capture – Both images are acquired at the same instant, minimizing motion artifacts between them.
  • Ideal for Dual-Mode Imaging – Examples:
    • HDR (short exposure vs. long exposure)
    • Multi-wavelength (different filters for each stream)
    • Stereo or dual-view setups

Trade-Offs

  • Vertical Resolution Reduction – Each image has half the number of lines, so vertical resolution is reduced unless interpolation is applied.
  • Post-Processing Required – Must separate even and odd lines and reconstruct full frames.
  • Optical Setup Considerations – If used with different optics or filters, precise alignment is critical.

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