4,501 research outputs found
Visualization of Big Spatial Data using Coresets for Kernel Density Estimates
The size of large, geo-located datasets has reached scales where
visualization of all data points is inefficient. Random sampling is a method to
reduce the size of a dataset, yet it can introduce unwanted errors. We describe
a method for subsampling of spatial data suitable for creating kernel density
estimates from very large data and demonstrate that it results in less error
than random sampling. We also introduce a method to ensure that thresholding of
low values based on sampled data does not omit any regions above the desired
threshold when working with sampled data. We demonstrate the effectiveness of
our approach using both, artificial and real-world large geospatial datasets
Multi-camera Fourier Ptychographic Microscopy
We demonstrate aperture-synthetic diffracted field measurement using multiple mutually incoherent cameras in Fourier ptychography to provide a scaleable increase in data acquisition bandwidth. Our nine-camera system enables an order of magnitude improvement in image acquisition speed
Embedded pupil function recovery for Fourier ptychographic microscopy
We develop and test a pupil function determination algorithm, termed embedded pupil function recovery (EPRY), which can be incorporated into the Fourier ptychographic microscopy (FPM) algorithm and recover both the Fourier spectrum of sample and the pupil function of imaging system simultaneously. This EPRY-FPM algorithm eliminates the requirement of the previous FPM algorithm for a priori knowledge of the aberration in the imaging system to reconstruct a high quality image. We experimentally demonstrate the effectiveness of this algorithm by reconstructing high resolution, large field-of-view images of biological samples. We also illustrate that the pupil function we retrieve can be used to study the spatially varying aberration of a large field-of-view imaging system. We believe that this algorithm adds more flexibility to FPM and can be a powerful tool for the characterization of an imaging system’s aberration
New Approach on the General Shape Equation of Axisymmetric Vesicles
The general Helfrich shape equation determined by minimizing the curvature
free energy describes the equilibrium shapes of the axisymmetric lipid bilayer
vesicles in different conditions. It is a non-linear differential equation with
variable coefficients. In this letter, by analyzing the unique property of the
solution, we change this shape equation into a system of the two differential
equations. One of them is a linear differential equation. This equation system
contains all of the known rigorous solutions of the general shape equation. And
the more general constraint conditions are found for the solution of the
general shape equation.Comment: 8 pages, LaTex, submit to Mod. Phys. Lett.
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