Impact of surface roughness on laser surface authentication signatures under linear and rotational displacements.
暂无分享,去创建一个
Laser surface authentication (LSA) is a technique for authenticating optically rough surfaces based on the intensity of diffusely scattered light. The degradation in the LSA signature over linear and rotational displacement is examined. Randomly roughened glass surfaces with roughness amplitudes ranging from 0.4 microm to 3 microm and correlation lengths from 16 microm to 45 microm are examined experimentally, showing that the average size of the surface feature has a negligible impact on the rate of LSA signature degradation. The average size of the surface features is shown to have a greater effect on the fractional intensity of the variations in diffuse light and on the quality of LSA signature match.
[1] Stephen A. Benton,et al. Physical one-way functions , 2001 .
[2] John Daugman,et al. The importance of being random: statistical principles of iris recognition , 2003, Pattern Recognit..
[3] Gang Xiong,et al. Forgery: ‘Fingerprinting’ documents and packaging , 2005, Nature.
[4] D. Saltzberg,et al. Observation of light transmission through randomly rough glass surfaces beyond the critical angle. , 2007, Journal of The Optical Society of America A-optics Image Science and Vision.