Flare7K: APhenomenological Nighttime Flare Removal Dataset (Supplementary Material)

Neural Information Processing Systems 

In this supplementary material, we present additional details of the proposed Flare7K dataset and experimental settings and show more results. Figure 1: Illustration of a simplified lens system. In the lens and aperture plane, the light passes through the dirty aperture and lens system, leaving a scattering flare on the image plane. In this section, we use a simplified Fourier optics model to illustrate how different kinds of scattering flares occur. A basic lens system can be viewed as a combination of one convex lens, one aperture, and an image plane as shown in Figure 1. We set the optical center as the origin of a coordinate system. Then, the light source's position is (x0,y0, z0). It is a combination of aperture function eAλ(x,y) and a lens function eTL(x,y). Supposing the focus of the lens is f and the lens is ideal. After adjusting the origin of x1 and x2, Equation (11) can be viewed as a standard Fourier transformation. Thus, the point spread function (PSF) which is the square of the amplitude of the image plane's optical field can be written as: PSFλ = |F{eAλ(x,y)}|2. Since stains with depth may bring phase shift for the aperture function, the PSFλ may vary with the wavelength λof the light source.

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