220 research outputs found

    Skeleton Filter:A Self-Symmetric Filter for Skeletonization in Noisy Text Images

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    Skeletonization methods for image and volume inpainting

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    Skeletonization methods for image and volume inpainting

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    Transient Study of the Wetting Films in Porous Media Using 3D X-Ray Computed Micro-Tomography: Effect of Imbibition Rate and Pore Geometry

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    Imbibition in porous media is governed by the complex interplay between viscous and capillary forces, pore structure and fluid properties. Understanding and predicting imbibition is important in many natural and engineered applications; it affects the efficiency of oil production operations, the moisture and contaminant transport in soil science, and the formation of defects in certain types of composite materials. Majority of the studies published on the transient imbibition behavior in a porous medium were conducted in the simplified 2D transparent micromodels or the 2D projection visualization (X-ray or visible light) of the 3D porous medium. However, the pore level transient imbibition studies have not been reported on real three dimensional porous medium. The main challenge arises from the slowness of the present 3D imaging techniques in comparison with the speed of the pore filling events. To overcome these difficulties, we have developed a novel experimental technique using UV-induced polymerization, which allows the fluid phase distributions to be frozen in place during transient imbibition. Pore-scale structure of the front can then be examined in the 3D microscopic details using the X-ray Computed micro-Tomography (XCT). We have also developed a suite of advanced image segmentation programs to segment the grayscale XCT data. Image-based physically representative pore network generation techniques were unitized to quantify the geometry and topology of pore, wetting and nonwetting phase structure. Using UV initiated polymerization technique and image-based quantitative analysis tools; we have studied the effects of capillary number, pore structure and surface roughness on the structure of the transient imbibition front

    Mathematical Methods for the Quantification of Actin-Filaments in Microscopic Images

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    In cell biology confocal laser scanning microscopic images of the actin filament of human osteoblasts are produced to assess the cell development. This thesis aims at an advanced approach for accurate quantitative measurements about the morphology of the bright-ridge set of these microscopic images and thus about the actin filament. Therefore automatic preprocessing, tagging and quantification interplay to approximate the capabilities of the human observer to intuitively recognize the filaments correctly. Numerical experiments with random models confirm the accuracy of this approach

    Electronic speckle pattern interferometry for fracture expansion in nuclear graphite based on PDE image processing methods

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    Session PS - Posters: Paper 9525-103Conference 9525Nuclear graphite has been widely used as moderating and reflecting materials. However, due to severe neutron irradiation under high temperature, nuclear graphite is prone to deteriorate, resulting in massive microscopic flaws and even cracks under large stress in the later period of its service life. It is indispensable, therefore, to understand the fracture behavior of nuclear graphite to provide reference to structural integrity and safety analysis of nuclear graphite members in reactors. In this paper, we investigated the fracture expansion in nuclear graphite based on PDE image processing methods. We used the second-order oriented partial differential equations filtering model (SOOPDE) to denoise speckle noise, then used the oriented gradient vector fields for to obtain skeletons. The full-field displacement of fractured nuclear graphite and the location of the crack tip were lastly measured under various loading conditions
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