24,411 research outputs found
Physical-based optimization for non-physical image dehazing methods
Images captured under hazy conditions (e.g. fog, air pollution) usually present faded colors and loss of contrast. To improve their visibility, a process called image dehazing can be applied. Some of the most successful image dehazing algorithms are based on image processing methods but do not follow any physical image formation model, which limits their performance. In this paper, we propose a post-processing technique to alleviate this handicap by enforcing the original method to be consistent with a popular physical model for image formation under haze. Our results improve upon those of the original methods qualitatively and according to several metrics, and they have also been validated via psychophysical experiments. These results are particularly striking in terms of avoiding over-saturation and reducing color artifacts, which are the most common shortcomings faced by image dehazing methods
New tests and applications of the worldline path integral in the first order formalism
We present different non-perturbative calculations within the context of
Migdal's representation for the propagator and effective action of quantum
particles. We first calculate the exact propagators and effective actions for
Dirac, scalar and Proca fields in the presence of constant electromagnetic
fields, for an even-dimensional spacetime. Then we derive the propagator for a
charged scalar field in a spacelike vortex (i.e., instanton) background, in a
long-distance expansion, and the exact propagator for a massless Dirac field in
1+1 dimensions in an arbitrary background. Finally, we present an
interpretation of the chiral anomaly in the present context, finding a
condition that the paths must fulfil in order to have a non-vanishing anomaly.Comment: 26 page
Agent Based Models of Language Competition: Macroscopic descriptions and Order-Disorder transitions
We investigate the dynamics of two agent based models of language
competition. In the first model, each individual can be in one of two possible
states, either using language or language , while the second model
incorporates a third state XY, representing individuals that use both languages
(bilinguals). We analyze the models on complex networks and two-dimensional
square lattices by analytical and numerical methods, and show that they exhibit
a transition from one-language dominance to language coexistence. We find that
the coexistence of languages is more difficult to maintain in the Bilinguals
model, where the presence of bilinguals in use facilitates the ultimate
dominance of one of the two languages. A stability analysis reveals that the
coexistence is more unlikely to happen in poorly-connected than in fully
connected networks, and that the dominance of only one language is enhanced as
the connectivity decreases. This dominance effect is even stronger in a
two-dimensional space, where domain coarsening tends to drive the system
towards language consensus.Comment: 30 pages, 11 figure
The impact of the air-fluorescence yield on the reconstructed shower parameters of ultra-high energy cosmic rays
An accurate knowledge of the fluorescence yield and its dependence on
atmospheric properties such as pressure, temperature or humidity is essential
to obtain a reliable measurement of the primary energy of cosmic rays in
experiments using the fluorescence technique. In this work, several sets of
fluorescence yield data (i.e. absolute value and quenching parameters) are
described and compared. A simple procedure to study the effect of the assumed
fluorescence yield on the reconstructed shower parameters (energy and shower
maximum depth) as a function of the primary features has been developed. As an
application, the effect of water vapor and temperature dependence of the
collisional cross section on the fluorescence yield and its impact on the
reconstruction of primary energy and shower maximum depth has been studied.Comment: Accepted in Astroparticle Physic
Anisotropic Dependence of Giant Magneto-Impedance of Amorphous Ferromagnetic Ribbon on Biasing Field
The magneto-impedance (MI) in amorphous ribbon of nominal composition
Fe73.5Nb3Cu1Si13.5B9 has been measured at 1MHz and at room temperature for
different configurations of exciting a.c and biasing d.c. fields. A large drop
in both resistance and reactance is observed as a function of d.c magnetic
field. When the d.c and a.c fields are parallel but normal to the axis of
ribbon, smaller magnetic field is needed to reduce the impedance to its small
saturated value compared to the situation when fields are along the axis of
ribbon. Larger d.c. field is required to lower the impedance when the d.c field
acts perpendicular to the plane of the ribbon. Such anisotropy in
magneto-impedance is related to the anisotropic response of the magnetization
of ribbon. The large change of impedance is attributed to large variation of
a.c permeability on the direction and magnitude of the dc biasing field.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, to be published in "International Journal of
Modern Physics B
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