93 research outputs found
Multi-frame image restoration method for novel rotating synthetic aperture imaging system
Abstract The novel rotating synthetic aperture (RSA) optical imaging system is an important development direction for future high-resolution optical remote sensing satellites in geostationary orbit. However, owing to the rotating rectangular pupil, the point spread function of the RSA system has an asymmetric spatial distribution, and the images obtained using the primary mirror from different rotation angles have nonuniform blur degradation. Moreover, platform vibration and pupil rotation have coupling effects on the RSA imaging, resulting in further radiometric and geometric quality degradation. To address these problems, the image degradation characteristics are first analyzed according to the imaging mechanism. Then, combined with the theory of mutual information, an image registration method is suggested by introducing the orientation gradient information. From this, a multi-frame image restoration model is proposed based on the directional gradient prior of the RSA system image. From the perspective of interpretation and application, when the aspect ratio is less than 3, the proposed inversion restoration method can achieve a satisfactory processing performance. This work can provide engineering application reference for the future space application of RSA imaging technology
Black Phosphorus Q-Switched Large-Mode-Area Tm-Doped Fiber Laser
We report on a passively Q-switched fiber laser with black phosphorus as saturable absorber. By employing the sol-gel fabricated large-mode-area Tm-doped fiber as gain medium, a high-energy Q-switched fiber laser has been demonstrated which delivers the maximum pulse energy of 11.72 μJ with the pulse width of 660 ns at the wavelength of 1954 nm. Our experimental results indicate that BP Q-switched large-mode-area Tm-doped fiber laser is an effective and reliable approach to generate high-energy pulses at 2 μm
Provably Convergent Schr\"odinger Bridge with Applications to Probabilistic Time Series Imputation
The Schr\"odinger bridge problem (SBP) is gaining increasing attention in
generative modeling and showing promising potential even in comparison with the
score-based generative models (SGMs). SBP can be interpreted as an
entropy-regularized optimal transport problem, which conducts projections onto
every other marginal alternatingly. However, in practice, only approximated
projections are accessible and their convergence is not well understood. To
fill this gap, we present a first convergence analysis of the Schr\"odinger
bridge algorithm based on approximated projections. As for its practical
applications, we apply SBP to probabilistic time series imputation by
generating missing values conditioned on observed data. We show that optimizing
the transport cost improves the performance and the proposed algorithm achieves
the state-of-the-art result in healthcare and environmental data while
exhibiting the advantage of exploring both temporal and feature patterns in
probabilistic time series imputation.Comment: Accepted by ICML 202
Image fusion for the novelty rotating synthetic aperture system based on vision transformer
Rotating synthetic aperture (RSA) technology offers a promising solution for achieving large-aperture and lightweight designs in optical remote-sensing systems. It employs a rectangular primary mirror, resulting in noncircular spatial symmetry in the point-spread function, which changes over time as the mirror rotates. Consequently, it is crucial to employ an appropriate image-fusion method to merge high-resolution information intermittently captured from different directions in the image sequence owing to the rotation of the mirror. However, existing image-fusion methods have struggled to address the unique imaging mechanism of this system and the characteristics of the geostationary orbit in which the system operates. To address this challenge, we model the imaging process of a noncircular rotating pupil and analyse its on-orbit imaging characteristics. Based on this analysis, we propose an image-fusion network based on a vision transformer. This network incorporates inter-frame mutual attention and intra-frame self-attention mechanisms, facilitating more effective extraction of temporal and spatial information from the image sequence. Specifically, mutual attention was used to model the correlation between pixels that were close to each other in the spatial and temporal dimensions, whereas long-range spatial dependencies were captured using intra-frame self-attention in the rotated variable-size attention block. We subsequently enhanced the fusion of spatiotemporal information using video swin transformer blocks. Extensive digital simulations and semi-physical imaging experiments on remote-sensing images obtained from the WorldView-3 satellite demonstrated that our method outperformed both image-fusion methods designed for the RSA system and state-of-the-art general deep learning-based methods
Transformer-based self-supervised image super-resolution method for Rotating Synthetic Aperture system via multi-temporal fusion
Manipulating refractive index, homogeneity and spectroscopy of Yb-doped silica-core glass towards high-power large mode area photonic crystal fiber lasers
Output power scaling of single mode large mode area (LMA) photonic crystal fiber (PCF) amplifiers urgently requires the low refractive index of Yb³⁺-doped silica glasses whilst maintaining high optical homogeneity. In this paper, we report on a promising alternative Yb³⁺/Al³⁺/F¯/P⁵⁺-co-doped silica core-glass (YAFP), which is prepared by modified sol-gel method developed by our group and highly suitable for fabricating high power LMA PCF amplifiers. By controlling the doping combinations of Al³⁺/F¯/P⁵⁺ in Yb³⁺- doped silica glass,it not only ensures low refractive index (RI) but also maintains the excellent optical homogeneity and spectroscopic properties of Yb³⁺. The spectroscopic properties of Yb³⁺ ions have not deteriorated by the co-doping of F¯ and P⁵⁺ in YAFP glass compared with that of Yb³⁺/Al³⁺ co-doped silica glass. A large-size (⌀5 mm × 90 mm) YAFP silica-core glass rod with low average RI difference of 2.6 × 10¯⁴ (with respect to pure silica glass), and low radial and axial RI fluctuations of ~2 × 10¯⁴, was prepared. A LMA PCF with 50 μm core diameter was obtained by stack-capillary-draw techniques using YAFP core glass. Its core NA is 0.027. An average amplified power of 97 W peaking at 1030 nm and light-light efficiency of 54% are achieved from a 6.5 m long PCF in the pulse amplification laser experiment. Meanwhile, quasi-single-mode transmission is obtained with laser beam quality factor M² of 1.4
eGFRs from Asian-modified CKD-EPI and Chinese-modified CKD-EPI equations were associated better with hypertensive target organ damage in the community-dwelling elderly Chinese: the Northern Shanghai Study
A genome-wide association study in catfish reveals the presence of functional hubs of related genes within QTLs for columnaris disease resistance
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Heart-thigh cuff pulse wave velocity: Aiming for the best of both worlds?
The assessment of the pulse waveform, as a tool for diagnosis, has attracted interest for many hundreds of years, because it was recognised very early that arterial elasticity is related to characteristics of the pressure pulse waveform and the velocity of its propagation through the arterial tree. With the emergence of sophisticated computers and software, novel non-invasive methods of assessing arterial stiffness have been developed, hailing the modern era of arterial pulse wave assessment. Studies conducted by many investigators around the world have now generated an impressive body of evidence demonstrating the importance of large artery stiffness in our understanding of cardiovascular disease risk. Increased aortic stiffness is associated with cardiovascular risk factors such as hypertension, hyperlipidaemia and diabetes1, underlining its role as an important biomarker of disease. However, it is also likely that aortic stiffening drives various disease processes and is an important risk factor in itself. Indeed, aortic pulse wave velocity (PWV), a robust index of aortic stiffness, independently predicts future fatal and non-fatal cardiovascular disease events and all-cause mortality2. As such, aortic PWV adds value to risk prediction beyond that provided by traditional cardiovascular risk factors and improves risk classification. But despite these data, the widespread adoption of aortic PWV into routine clinical assessment has yet to be realised.This work was funded, in part, by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre. The views expressed are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the NIHR. The authors appreciate the financial support provided by China Scholarship Council (CSC, Grant No. 201806260070) for S.Y
Transcription Analysis for Core Networks of lncRNAs–mRNAs: Implication for Potential Role in Sterility of Crassostrea gigas
Long noncoding RNA (lncRNA), a type of non-protein-coding transcript, is emerging as a crucial regulator of gene expression. However, few roles of lncRNA in the reproductive process of the Pacific oyster (Crassostrea gigas) have been defined, especially in the regulatory mechanism of sterile triploids gametogenesis. To uncover the potential role of lncRNA, the gonads of diploids, sterile triploids, and partially sterile triploids underwent RNA sequencing. A total of 9618 reliable lncRNAs were identified. The target relationship between lncRNA and mRNA was predicted based on cis, trans, and antisense regulation with bioinformatic software. We chose differentially expressed lncRNAs and mRNAs when sterile triploids were compared to partially sterile triploids and diploids for subsequent functional enrichment analysis. Findings revealed that trans-regulatory lncRNAs might play a significant role in the gametogenesis of C. gigas. Combining pathway results, we constructed core networks of lncRNAs–mRNAs for triploid sterile females and hermaphrodites. Fifty-four genes related to cell division, germline-cell maintenance, and glycogen metabolism were found to be associated with sterility. A total of 28 candidate lncRNAs were predicted to trans-regulate these genes. We speculated that MSTRG.79882.3 and MSTRG.79882.4 for triploid sterile females and MSTRG.33704.1, MSTRG.63844.1, and MSTRG.5675.1 for hermaphrodites were highly important as they were predicted to regulate more sterility-specific genes than others. Our work collectively identified sterility-related lncRNAs and implicated the potential mechanism of lncRNA-mediated regulation in the gametogenesis of sterile triploid oysters
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