scholarly journals Scanning the Sonneberg Plate Archive by DIA

1994 ◽  
Vol 161 ◽  
pp. 183-184
Author(s):  
P. Kroll ◽  
P. Neugebauer

DIA (Digital Image Analyzer) is a new dedicated and low cost CCD line scanner, which has been invented at Sonneberg Observatory in collaboration with the Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics at Tübingen for scanning selected fields of the Sonneberg Plate Archive.

2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 2555-2561
Author(s):  
S. Gupta ◽  
N. Mohan

Digital image forgery has become extremely easy as low-cost image processing programs are readily available. Digital image forensics is a science of classifying images as authentic or manipulated. This paper aims at implementing a novel digital image forensics technique by exploiting an image’s Color Channel Characteristics (CCC). The CCCs considered are the noise and edge characteristics of the image. Averaging, median, Gaussian and Wiener filters along with Sobel, Canny, Prewitt and Laplacian of Gaussian (LoG) edge detectors are applied to get the noise and texture features. A complete, no reference, blind classifier for image tamper detection has been proposed and implemented. The proposed CCC classifier can detect copy-move as well as image splicing accurately with lower dimensionality. Support Vector Machine is used for classification of images as authentic or tampered. Experimental results have shown that the proposed technique outperforms the existing ones and may serve as a complete tool for digital image forensics.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Arza-García ◽  
C. Núñez-Temes ◽  
J. A. Lorenzana ◽  
J. Ortiz-Sanz ◽  
A. Castro ◽  
...  

AbstractDue to their cost, high-end commercial 3D-DIC (digital image correlation) systems are still inaccessible for many laboratories or small factories interested in lab testing materials. These professional systems can provide reliable and rapid full-field measurements that are essential in some laboratory tests with high-strain rate events or high dynamic loading. However, in many stress-controlled experiments, such as the Brazilian tensile strength (BTS) test of compacted soils, samples are usually large and fail within a timeframe of several minutes. In those cases, alternative low-cost methods could be successfully used instead of commercial systems. This paper proposes a methodology to apply 2D-DIC techniques using consumer-grade cameras and the open-source image processing software DICe (Sandia National Lab) for monitoring the standardized BTS test. Unlike most previous studies that theoretically estimate systematic errors or use local measures from strain gauges for accuracy assessment, we propose a contrast methodology with independent full-field measures. The displacement fields obtained with the low-cost system are benchmarked with the professional stereo-DIC system Aramis-3D (GOM GmbH) in four BTS experiments using compacted soil specimens. Both approaches proved to be valid tools for obtaining full-field measurements and showing the sequence of crack initiation, propagation and termination in the BTS, constituting reliable alternatives to traditional strain gauges. Mean deviations obtained between the low-cost 2D-DIC approach and Aramis-3D in measuring in-plane components were 0.08 mm in the perpendicular direction of loading (ΔX) and 0.06 mm in the loading direction (ΔY). The proposed low-cost approach implies considerable savings compared to commercial systems.


2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gun-Jin Yun ◽  
Shen Shang ◽  
Shilpa Kunchum ◽  
Joan Carletta ◽  
Si-Byung Nam

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