An Introduction to Digital Imaging - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 45
About This Presentation
Title:

An Introduction to Digital Imaging

Description:

Digital Imaging. Image Acquisition. Image Storage. Image Processing. Image Printing. What is an image? ... most, a 2000 line photo CRT (~500 dpi). Film ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:496
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 46
Provided by: hendrik
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: An Introduction to Digital Imaging


1
An Introduction to Digital Imaging
  • H. Colijn
  • OSU Campus Electron Optics Facility

2
Digital Imaging
  • Image Acquisition
  • Image Storage
  • Image Processing
  • Image Printing

3
What is an image?
  • A 2-dimensional representation of the function, I
    f(x,y) where
  • ? f(x,y) is a continuous function for analog
    images and
  • ? f(x,y) is a discrete function for digital
    images.

4
Acquisition Considerations
  • The image magnification and intensity should be
    calibrated.
  • The image should not be geometrically distorted.
  • The entire range of the original image function
    should be recorded with a known response function
    (preferably linear).

5
How do you acquire a digital image?
  • Film / scanner
  • Video camera / framestore
  • Digital camera
  • Digital scan generator

6
Film
  • Film, while an old technology, has many benefits
    as a recording medium.
  • High spatial resolution
  • Parallel image recording
  • Long storage life
  • No special reader needed
  • Cheap

7
Film
Film is characterized by
  • Film grain/speed -- resolution is determined by
    the grain size.
  • Contrast and Optical Density (OD) range

8
Polaroid Type 55
  • Intrinsic Film Resolution
  • Positive - 20-25 lp/mm (1000 dpi)
  • Negative - 150 lp/mm (7500 dpi)
  • SEMs use, at most, a 2000 line photo CRT (500
    dpi).

9
Film Characteristic Curve
10
Scanner
  • Optical resolution vs. interpolated resolution
  • Input Density range
  • Digitizing precision ( of bits)
  • Beware of gamma (non-linear) corrections during
    scanning

11
Video
  • Advantages
  • Commonly available and cheap
  • Good Temporal resolution
  • Disadvantages
  • Limited Spatial resolution
  • Limited Dynamic range
  • Interlaced acquisition

12
Video Formats
  • NTSC - Standard US format
  • 525 lines, interlaced, 1/30 sec refresh
  • 43 aspect ratio
  • PAL - Standard European format
  • 625 lines, 1/25 sec refresh
  • French use Secam (700 lines)
  • HDTV
  • 1000 lines with a 169 aspect ratio

13
Framestores
  • Image processing functions in hardware.
  • Averaging and integration capabilities.
  • Background subtraction can improve dynamic range

14
Digital Cameras
  • CCD vs. linear array
  • Consumer vs. scientific grade CCDs
  • High quality CCDs (linear, few defects, etc.) are
    expensive (e.g. 1k ? 1k TEM system 100k)
  • The entire camera system is important, not just
    the CCD.

15
Digital Scan generator
  • Easily capable of 4k x4k resolution (12 bit DAC)
  • 14 and 16 bit DACs now available
  • Requires a raster or scanning type instrument

16
Digital image considerations
  • The ultimate questions are
  • ? What does the human eye see?
  • ? Does the image convey the necessary
    information?
  • Consider the final image requirements before
    acquiring the initial image.

17
Spatial Resolution
  • The human eye has a resolution of 100-200mm (125
    - 250 per inch)
  • People will position themselves so that the
    smallest feature of interest subtends roughly 1
    minute of arc i.e. 1/60?.

18
Intensity Response
  • The eye can respond to a light intensity range of
    1010, although the instantaneous dynamic range is
    about 100 gray levels
  • However, at any one point in a complex image the
    eye can detect only about 15 - 25 gray levels.

19
Visual Response
Power law
Logarithmic
Perceived Brightness
Luminance
20
The bottom line is
  • You need a sufficiently high pixel frequency for
    the image to appear smooth.
  • For most complex images, you need at least 100
    gray levels for the eye to see a reasonably
    smooth display.

21
Digital Image Storage
  • Format
  • Lossless (LZW, e.g. .zip)
  • Lossy (JPEG)
  • Media
  • Zip disks
  • CD-ROM
  • DVD

22
Storage Formats
  • TIFF
  • Usually lossless format
  • Mostly standardized
  • JPEG
  • lossy format
  • variable compression ratio

23
TIFF vs. JPEG
TIFF
JPEG
24
TIFF vs. JPEG
TIFF
JPEG
25
TIFF vs. JPEG
TIFF
JPEG
26
Storage Formats
  • BMP
  • Windows, Lossless
  • GIF
  • One byte deep
  • PICT
  • Mac standard format

27
Storage Formats
  • Proprietary Formats
  • Gatan
  • EDAX
  • IMG (Philips SEM)

28
Dealing with digital images
  • Enlarging
  • Correcting aberrations
  • Image Processing and Enhancing
  • Feature Analysis
  • Stereology and Reconstruction

29
Enlarging
  • Overenlarging analog images gradually leads to
    noise or fuzziness.
  • Overenlarging digital images allows us to see the
    pixels in the image.

30
Correcting Image Defects
  • Non-square pixels
  • Image distortion
  • Uneven illumination

31
Non-Square Pixels
Original XL-30 image
Corrected XL-30 image
32
Image Distortion
Original distorted image
Corrected image
33
Image Processing
  • Contrast enhancement
  • Gamma corrections, Histogram equalization,
    Unsharp masking, etc.
  • Image math (addition, subtraction, division)
  • Fourier filtering
  • Kernel (convolution) operators
  • 3-D reconstruction

34
Feature Analysis
  • Usually necessary to create a binary image
  • Enhance image first, then threshold.
  • Use erosion and dilation operators to segment the
    image.

35
Printing the image
  • Gray scale printers
  • Dye-sub
  • Video printers
  • Binary printers
  • Laser
  • Ink-jet

36
Grayscale images on binary printers
  • Use a half-toning process
  • half-toning and screens
  • screen angles
  • half-tone response

37
Half-toning and screening
38
Binary half-toning
39
What is Gamma?
Output (Input)1/?
Output Intensity
? gt 1
? lt 1
Input Intensity
40
Dithering
Original
Random noise added
41
Publication quality images?
  • Images in publications are half-toned
  • Newspapers use 100 lpi
  • e.g. Dispatch, Lantern
  • Magazines use 130 lpi
  • e.g. Time, Phil. Mag.
  • Some Journals use 170 lpi
  • e.g. Microscopy Microanalysis

42
Image Quality
Newspaper - 100 lpi
Magazine - 130 lpi
43
Image Quality
Book - 140 lpi
Journal - 170 lpi
44
Best Image Quality
45
What resources do we have?
  • Books
  • John Russ - The Image Processing Handbook
  • Software
  • PhotoShop/IP Toolkit (PC/Mac)
  • NIH Image (Mac, free)
  • Gatan Digital Micrograph (Mac, expensive)
  • Matlab Image Toolkit (tools only)
  • GraphicConverter (Mac)
  • MS Imager (PC, included with MS Office)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com