3,426 research outputs found
Humans perceive flicker artifacts at 500 Hz.
Humans perceive a stable average intensity image without flicker artifacts when a television or monitor updates at a sufficiently fast rate. This rate, known as the critical flicker fusion rate, has been studied for both spatially uniform lights, and spatio-temporal displays. These studies have included both stabilized and unstablized retinal images, and report the maximum observable rate as 50-90 Hz. A separate line of research has reported that fast eye movements known as saccades allow simple modulated LEDs to be observed at very high rates. Here we show that humans perceive visual flicker artifacts at rates over 500 Hz when a display includes high frequency spatial edges. This rate is many times higher than previously reported. As a result, modern display designs which use complex spatio-temporal coding need to update much faster than conventional TVs, which traditionally presented a simple sequence of natural images
Intrinsic flat stability of the positive mass theorem for graphical hypersurfaces of Euclidean space
The rigidity of the Positive Mass Theorem states that the only complete
asymptotically flat manifold of nonnegative scalar curvature and zero mass is
Euclidean space. We study the stability of this statement for spaces that can
be realized as graphical hypersurfaces in Euclidean space. We prove (under
certain technical hypotheses) that if a sequence of complete asymptotically
flat graphs of nonnegative scalar curvature has mass approaching zero, then the
sequence must converge to Euclidean space in the pointed intrinsic flat sense.
The appendix includes a new Gromov-Hausdorff and intrinsic flat compactness
theorem for sequences of metric spaces with uniform Lipschitz bounds on their
metrics.Comment: 31 pages, 2 figures, v2: to appear in Crelle's Journal, many minor
changes, one new exampl
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