43 research outputs found

    Digital Color Imaging

    Full text link
    This paper surveys current technology and research in the area of digital color imaging. In order to establish the background and lay down terminology, fundamental concepts of color perception and measurement are first presented us-ing vector-space notation and terminology. Present-day color recording and reproduction systems are reviewed along with the common mathematical models used for representing these devices. Algorithms for processing color images for display and communication are surveyed, and a forecast of research trends is attempted. An extensive bibliography is provided

    A study of manual control methodology with annotated bibliography

    Get PDF
    Manual control methodology - study with annotated bibliograph

    Laser scanner jitter characterization, page content analysis for optimal rendering, and understanding image graininess

    Get PDF
    In Chapter 1, the electrophotographic (EP) process is widely used in imaging systems such as laser printers and office copiers. In the EP process, laser scanner jitter is a common artifact that mainly appears along the scan direction due to the condition of polygon facets. Prior studies have not focused on the periodic characteristic of laser scanner jitter in terms of the modeling and analysis. This chapter addresses the periodic characteristic of laser scanner jitter in the mathematical model. In the Fourier domain, we derive an analytic expression for laser scanner jitter in general, and extend the expression assuming a sinusoidal displacement. This leads to a simple closed-form expression in terms of Bessel functions of the first kind. We further examine the relationship between the continuous-space halftone image and the periodic laser scanner jitter. The simulation results show that our proposed mathematical model predicts the phenomenon of laser scanner jitter effectively, when compared to the characterization using a test pattern, which consists of a flat field with 25% dot coverage However, there is some mismatches between the analytical spectrum and spectrum of the processed scanned test target. We improve experimental results by directly estimating the displacement instead of assuming a sinusoidal displacement. This gives a better prediction of the phenomenon of laser scanner jitter. ^ In Chapter 2, we describe a segmentation-based object map correction algorithm, which can be integrated in a new imaging pipeline for laser electrophotographic (EP) printers. This new imaging pipeline incorporates the idea of object-oriented halftoning, which applies different halftone screens to different regions of the page, to improve the overall print quality. In particular, smooth areas are halftoned with a low-frequency screen to provide more stable printing; whereas detail areas are halftoned with a high-frequency screen, since this will better reproduce the object detail. In this case, the object detail also serves to mask any print defects that arise from the use of a high frequency screen. These regions are defined by the initial object map, which is translated from the page description language (PDL). However, the information of object type obtained from the PDL may be incorrect. Some smooth areas may be labeled as raster causing them to be halftoned with a high frequency screen, rather than being labeled as vector, which would result in them being rendered with a low frequency screen. To correct the misclassification, we propose an object map correction algorithm that combines information from the incorrect object map with information obtained by segmentation of the continuous-tone RGB rasterized page image. Finally, the rendered image can be halftoned by the object-oriented halftoning approach, based on the corrected object map. Preliminary experimental results indicate the benefits of our algorithm combined with the new imaging pipeline, in terms of correction of misclassification errors. ^ In Chapter 3, we describe a study to understand image graininess. With the emergence of the high-end digital printing technologies, it is of interest to analyze the nature and causes of image graininess in order to understand the factors that prevent high-end digital presses from achieving the same print quality as commercial offset presses. We want to understand how image graininess relates to the halftoning technology and marking technology. This chapter provides three different approaches to understand image graininess. First, we perform a Fourier-based analysis of regular and irregular periodic, clustered-dot halftone textures. With high-end digital printing technology, irregular screens can be considered since they can achieve a better approximation to the screen sets used for commercial offset presses. This is due to the fact that the elements of the periodicity matrix of an irregular screen are rational numbers, rather than integers, which would be the case for a regular screen. From the analytical results, we show that irregular halftone textures generate new frequency components near the spectrum origin; and these frequency components are low enough to be visible to the human viewer. However, regular halftone textures do not have these frequency components. In addition, we provide a metric to measure the nonuniformity of a given halftone texture. The metric indicates that the nonuniformity of irregular halftone textures is higher than the nonuniformity of regular halftone textures. Furthermore, a method to visualize the nonuniformity of given halftone textures is described. The analysis shows that irregular halftone textures are grainier than regular halftone textures. Second, we analyze the regular and irregular periodic, clustered-dot halftone textures by calculating three spatial statistics. First, the disparity between lattice points generated by the periodicity matrix, and centroids of dot clusters are considered. Next, the area of dot clusters in regular and irregular halftone textures is considered. Third, the compactness of dot clusters in the regular and irregular halftone textures is calculated. The disparity of between centroids of irregular dot clusters and lattices points generated by the irregular screen is larger than the disparity of between centroids of regular dot clusters and lattices points generated by the regular screen. Irregular halftone textures have higher variance in the histogram of dot-cluster area. In addition, the compactness measurement shows that irregular dot clusters are less compact than regular dot clusters. But, a clustered-dot halftone algorithm wants to produce clustered-dot as compact as possible. Lastly, we exam the current marking technology by printing the same halftone pattern on different substrates, glossy and polyester media. The experimental results show that the current marking technology provides better print quality on glossy media than on polyester media. With above three different approaches, we conclude that the current halftoning technology introduces image graininess in the spatial domain because of the non-integer elements in the periodicity matrix of the irregular screen and the finite addressability of the marking engine. In addition, the geometric characteristics of irregular dot clusters is more irregular than the geometric characteristics of regular dot clusters. Finally, the marking technology provides inconsistency of print quality between substrates

    A Study of the relative importance of plate halftone dot size and halftone creation method on the reproduction of highlight tonal regions for flexography

    Get PDF
    The flexographic printing process has historically had difficulty printing vignettes and highlights. In comparison to offset lithography and gravure, flexography suffers from dark highlights, dirty colors, less crispness and an inability to print full-range vignettes. The predominant belief by the printers and manufacturers in the flexographic industry is that these difficulties arise from the excessive dot gain inherent to the process. One major cause of dot gain in flexography is believed to be the halftone dot structure on the printing plate. Many methods have been developed around modification of the traditional plate creation methods with the goal of obtaining an optimal dot structure for minimizing dot gain on press. These methods have included the use of alternate light sources, exposure time modifications, FM screening, direct-to-plate technology and others. One explanation that hasn\u27t been explored is that the printed dot size is purely a function of the ability to produce a small dot on the printing plate. This work performed a series of pressruns using a selection of the popular halftone dot creation technologies to determine whether it is merely the ability to put the smallest dot on the plate that provides optimum print quality. Additionally, the performance of each of the methods was compared to determine which one (if any) produced the best results. The methods used included conventional and digital platemaking methods and the use of alternate light sources, exposure times, and screening methods. Tone reproduction was evaluated using a metric derived from colorimetric data known as %(delta)E*. Average values for this metric, average dot size on plate, average shoulder angle, and descriptor values for screen/film/exposure type were analyzed using linear xv regression to determine the variable that had the most significant effect. Tone stability and tone reproduction plots were utilized to assess overall tone reproduction for each of the conditions for several ranges of dot sizes. Lastly, a psychometric test was performed on the highlight vignettes to determine which had the smoothest appearance. Test results indicated that plate dot size was the most significant factor in the tone reproduction of the image tested. Of the plate creation methods tested, the screening technique that appeared to have the least noise as well as repeatability was the Hybrid screening. The film technique that showed the best stability over all conditions was the digital plate. The combination of techniques that exhibited the most stability was the digital plate/Hybrid Screening/normal light exposure combination. The ability to create and print the smallest dot possible on plate is essential for superior highlight quality. This conclusion in combination with the results of hypothesis number one (plate dot area is the only factor that affects tone reproduction) present the most significant findings of this study. The implication here is that printers should determine the best method at their disposal of creating the smallest dots possible to optimize high light printing. Tone reproduction plots indicate that for the highlight tones range (0-20% dot sizes) the best overall tone reproduction was that of digital plate/Hybrid screen/high expo sure and digital plate/Hybrid screen/normal exposure conditions. Tone reproduction plots indicate that for the extreme highlight tones range (0-5%dot sizes) the best tone reproduction was that of digital plate/AM screen/normal exposure. For vignette smoothness, the panel of observers selected the digital plate/AM screen/bank light normal exposure as the smoothest of the samples presented

    Optical Delay Interferometers and their Application for Self-coherent Detection

    Get PDF
    Self-coherent receivers are promising candidates for reception of 100 Gbit/s data rates in optical networks. Self-coherent receivers consist of multiple optical delay interferometers (DI) with high-speed photodiodes attached to the outputs. By DSP of the photo currents it becomes possible to receive coherently modulated optical signals. Especially promising for 100 Gbit/s networks is the PolMUX DQPSK format, the self-coherent reception of which is described in detail

    Compression, pose tracking, and halftoning

    Get PDF
    In this thesis, we discuss image compression, pose tracking, and halftoning. Although these areas seem to be unrelated at first glance, they can be connected through video coding as application scenario. Our first contribution is an image compression algorithm based on a rectangular subdivision scheme which stores only a small subsets of the image points. From these points, the remained of the image is reconstructed using partial differential equations. Afterwards, we present a pose tracking algorithm that is able to follow the 3-D position and orientation of multiple objects simultaneously. The algorithm can deal with noisy sequences, and naturally handles both occlusions between different objects, as well as occlusions occurring in kinematic chains. Our third contribution is a halftoning algorithm based on electrostatic principles, which can easily be adjusted to different settings through a number of extensions. Examples include modifications to handle varying dot sizes or hatching. In the final part of the thesis, we show how to combine our image compression, pose tracking, and halftoning algorithms to novel video compression codecs. In each of these four topics, our algorithms yield excellent results that outperform those of other state-of-the-art algorithms.In dieser Arbeit werden die auf den ersten Blick vollkommen voneinander unabhängig erscheinenden Bereiche Bildkompression, 3D-Posenschätzung und Halbtonverfahren behandelt und im Bereich der Videokompression sinnvoll zusammengeführt. Unser erster Beitrag ist ein Bildkompressionsalgorithmus, der auf einem rechteckigen Unterteilungsschema basiert. Dieser Algorithmus speichert nur eine kleine Teilmenge der im Bild vorhandenen Punkte, während die restlichen Punkte mittels partieller Differentialgleichungen rekonstruiert werden. Danach stellen wir ein Posenschätzverfahren vor, welches die 3D-Position und Ausrichtung von mehreren Objekten anhand von Bilddaten gleichzeitig verfolgen kann. Unser Verfahren funktioniert bei verrauschten Videos und im Falle von Objektüberlagerungen. Auch Verdeckungen innerhalb einer kinematischen Kette werden natürlich behandelt. Unser dritter Beitrag ist ein Halbtonverfahren, das auf elektrostatischen Prinzipien beruht. Durch eine Reihe von Erweiterungen kann dieses Verfahren flexibel an verschiedene Szenarien angepasst werden. So ist es beispielsweise möglich, verschiedene Punktgrößen zu verwenden oder Schraffuren zu erzeugen. Der letzte Teil der Arbeit zeigt, wie man unseren Bildkompressionsalgorithmus, unser Posenschätzverfahren und unser Halbtonverfahren zu neuen Videokompressionsalgorithmen kombinieren kann. Die für jeden der vier Themenbereiche entwickelten Verfahren erzielen hervorragende Resultate, welche die Ergebnisse anderer moderner Verfahren übertreffen

    Streamlined design and self reliant hardware for active control of precision space structures

    Get PDF
    Precision space structures may require active vibration control to satisfy critical performance requirements relating to line-of-sight pointing accuracy and the maintenance of precise, internal alignments. In order for vibration control concepts to become operational, it is necessary that their benefits be practically demonstrated in large scale ground-based experiments. A unique opportunity to carry out such demonstrations on a wide variety of experimental testbeds was provided by the NASA Control-Structure Integration (CSI) Guest Investigator (GI) Program. This report surveys the experimental results achieved by the Harris Corporation GI team on both Phases 1 and 2 of the program and provides a detailed description of Phase 2 activities. The Phase 1 results illustrated the effectiveness of active vibration control for space structures and demonstrated a systematic methodology for control design, implementation test. In Phase 2, this methodology was significantly streamlined to yield an on-site, single session design/test capability. Moreover, the Phase 2 research on adaptive neural control techniques made significant progress toward fully automated, self-reliant space structure control systems. As a further thrust toward productized, self-contained vibration control systems, the Harris Phase II activity concluded with experimental demonstration of new vibration isolation hardware suitable for a wide range of space-flight and ground-based commercial applications.The CSI GI Program Phase 1 activity was conducted under contract NASA1-18872, and the Phase 2 activity was conducted under NASA1-19372

    Microwave resonant sensors

    Get PDF
    Microwave resonant sensors use the spectral characterisation of a resonator to make high sensitivity measurements of material electromagnetic properties at GHz frequencies. They have been applied to a wide range of industrial and scientific measurements, and used to study a diversity of physical phenomena. Recently, a number of challenging dynamic applications have been developed that require very high speed and high performance, such as kinetic inductance detectors and scanning microwave microscopes. Others, such as sensors for miniaturised fluidic systems and non-invasive blood glucose sensors, also require low system cost and small footprint. This thesis investigates new and improved techniques for implementing microwave resonant sensor systems, aiming to enhance their suitability for such demanding tasks. This was achieved through several original contributions: new insights into coupling, dynamics, and statistical properties of sensors; a hardware implementation of a realtime multitone readout system; and the development of efficient signal processing algorithms for the extraction of sensor measurements from resonator response data. The performance of this improved sensor system was verified through a number of novel measurements, achieving a higher sampling rate than the best available technology yet with equivalent accuracy and precision. At the same time, these experiments revealed unforeseen applications in liquid metrology and precision microwave heating of miniature flow systems.EThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceGBUnited Kingdo
    corecore