Ugrás a tartalomra
mobile

Heritázs

  • Keresés
  • Gyűjtemények
Magyarhu
  • Englishen
  • Српскиsr
  • Serbo-Croatiansh
BejelentkezésRegisztráció
  • Kötet áttekintése
  • Oldal
  • Szöveg
  • Metaadatok
  • Kivágás
Előnézet
srb_000007/0000

Charisma - J_Dyer_G_Verri_and_J_Cupitt_Multispectral

  • Előnézet
  • Metaadatok mutatása
  • Permalink mutatása
Összes oldal
192
Gyűjtemény
Presentations of MSI conference in Serbia
srb_000007/0018
  • Kötet áttekintése
  • Oldal
  • Szöveg
  • Metaadatok
  • Kivágás
Oldal 19 [19]
  • Előnézet
  • Permalink mutatása
  • JPG
  • TIFF
  • Előző
  • Következő
srb_000007/0018

OCR

darker than the lower section. Figure 1-7(b), an image of a uniformly reflective board taken under the same lighting conditions shows that there is an illumination gradient from dark (top of the image) to light (bottom of the image). A corrected image, where this gradient has been removed (see later for details), produces an image which appears more evenly illuminated, Figure 1-7(c). Optimisation of experimental procedures can minimise the spatial inhomogeneities in illumination which cause these effects. Symmetrical positioning of the radiation sources, avoiding specular reflections and shadows and checking the intensity of the incident radiation around the object with a light meter, are some of the most important factors in achieving these optimal conditions. Further recommendations and solutions for the illumination of objects can be found in the numerous manuals available on the photography of works of art." However, site or object constraints may sometimes impede appropriate positioning of the radiation sources or accurate light intensity measurements, in these cases the inhomogeneities encountered may be addressed via post-processing methodologies. Figure 1-7. (a) Visible-reflected image of a detail from a wall painting fragment from the British Museum (Winged youth from the Tomb of the Nasonii, 1883,0505.5) showing inhomogeneous illumination. (b) Image of a uniformly reflective board taken under the same lighting conditions showing an illumination gradient, from dark (top of the image) to light (bottom of the image). (c) The corrected image appears more evenly illuminated. The mathematical operation of compensating visible, UV- and IR-reflected images for the Spatial inhomogeneities of the radiation source and establishing uniform illumination conditions is known as "flat-fielding" ?? " ? (see Appendix 1 for more explanation). Experimentally this involves recording the distribution of the source on a uniformly reflective board (as seen in the above examples) and dividing the reflected image by the distribution of the radiation in post-processing. This procedure also removes spurious effects caused by variations in the pixel-to-pixel sensitivity of the detector and/or by distortions in the optical path. Version No. 1.0 11 Date : 14/10/2013

Szerkezeti

Custom

Image Metadata

Kép szélessége
2481 px
Kép magassága
3508 px
Képfelbontás
300 px/inch
Kép eredeti mérete
1.59 MB
Permalinkből jpg
srb_000007/0018.jpg
Permalinkből OCR
srb_000007/0018.ocr

Adatvédelem

  • Adatvédelmi szabályzat
  • Süti – Cookie kezelése

  • https://facebook.com/tripont

Oldalink

  • heritazs.hu
  • phaseone.hu
  • tripont.hu
  • tripont.hu/problog

Kapcsolat

  • +36 30 462 23 40
  • klinger.gabor@tripont.hu
  • 1131 Budapest,
  • Reitter Ferenc utca 132/J.

  • Copyright © 2023 Tripont Kft.
  • Copyright © 2024 Tripont Kft.

Heritázs

BejelentkezésRegisztráció

Bejelentkezés

Elfelejtettem a jelszavamat
  • Keresés
  • Gyűjtemények
Magyarhu
  • Englishen
  • Српскиsr
  • Serbo-Croatiansh