• Title/Summary/Keyword: Flat Field Correction

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Analysis of Noise Power Spectrum According to Flat-Field Correction in Digital Radiography (디지털 의료영상에서 Flat-Field 보정에 따른 Noise Power Spectrum 분석)

  • Lee, Meena;Kwon, Soonmu;Chon, Kwon Su
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Radiology
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    • v.7 no.3
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    • pp.227-232
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    • 2013
  • The pixels used in a digital X-ray detector have different sensitivities and offset values. A non-uniform image is consequently obtained. Flat-field correction was introduced to resolve this problem and carried out image preprocessing in a digital imaging system. Nevertheless, the non-uniform images caused by several reasons have been being occasionally acquired. In this study, the non-uniform images acquired in digital imaging systems were applied to flat-field correction, and NPSs were calculated and analyzed with those images before and after correction. It was confirmed that low frequency noise were effectively eliminated.

Image Correction Method for Segmented Linear Detector (모듈로 구성된 선형 검출기의 영상보정 방법)

  • Chon, Kwon-Su;Oh, Suk-Sim;Jin, Wang-Youn
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Radiology
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    • v.16 no.2
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    • pp.163-168
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    • 2022
  • Linear detectors composed of several modules have been widely used in industrial in-line inspection. Two dimensional image obtained from the linear detector shows line artifact at the connection part of each module. In this study, we proposed a method to remove the line artifact using the flat-field correction and a wedge phantom image. Conventional flat-field correction has been applied to remove the artifact, however there are still line artifacts even after applying correction. It was found that two edge pixels at the connection part of two modules were over-corrected after the flat-field correction. Those edge pixels was corrected by using the correction factor obtained from an image of the wedge phantom, and images removed line artifacts were obtained. It is necessary to improve the method obtained manually the correction factor from the image of the wedge phantom.

An Iterative Method for Flat-Field Correction of Digital Radiography When Detector is at Any Position (반복적인 방법을 이용한 임의의 DR detector 위치에서의 flat field correction 방법 연구)

  • Kim, Do-Il;Lee, Hyoung-Koo;Kim, Sung-Hyeon;Park, Dae-Sop;Choe, Bo-Young;Suh, Tae-Suk
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society of Medical Physics Conference
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    • 2004.11a
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    • pp.64-66
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    • 2004
  • When examing patients with DRs it is necessary to remove bad pixels and lines and to correct non-uniform offsets and x-ray field. For non-uniformity correction a flat field x-ray image is needed, and to obtain it the center of detector is usually aligned with the focal spot of the x-ray tube, which is conserved when examing patients to preserve the flat field. In some of radiographic techniques, however, it is necessary to move the x-ray tube off the center position of detector or tilt the detector. We investigated the effect of detector tilting on the non-uniformity correction, and propose a method to reduce the effect using a new algorithm. The flat field of X-ray in the DR detector could be guaranteed with this result.

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PIXEL-BASED CORRECTION METHOD FOR GAFCHROMIC®EBT FILM DOSIMETRY

  • Jeong, Hae-Sun;Han, Young-Yih;Kum, O-Yeon;Kim, Chan-Hyeong;Ju, Sang-Gyu;Shin, Jung-Suk;Kim, Jin-Sung;Park, Joo-Hwan
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.42 no.6
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    • pp.670-679
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    • 2010
  • In this paper, a new approach using a pixel-based correction method was developed to fix the non-uniform responses of flat-bed type scanners used for radiochromic film dosimetry. In order to validate the method's performance, two cases were tested: the first consisted of simple dose distributions delivered by a single port; the second was a complicated dose distribution composed of multiple beams. In the case of the simple individual dose condition, ten different doses, from 8.3 cGy to 307.1 cGy, were measured, horizontal profiles were analyzed using the pixel-based correcton method and compared with results measured by an ionization chamber and results corrected using the existing correction method. A complicated inverse pyramid dose distribution was made by piling up four different field shapes, which were measured with GAFCHROMIC$^{(R)}$EBT film and compared with the Monte Carlo calculation; as well as the dose distribution corrected using a conventional method. The results showed that a pixel-based correction method reduced dose difference from the reference measurement down to 1% in the flat dose distribution region or 2 mm in a steep dose gradient region compared to the reference data, which were ionization chamber measurement data for simple cases and the MC computed data for the complicated case, with an exception for very low doses of less than about 10 cGy in the simple case. Therefore, the pixel-based scanner correction method is expected to enhance the accuracy of GAFCHROMIC$^{(R)}$EBT film dosimetry, which is a widely used tool for two-dimensional dosimetry.

Field-Curvature Correction According to the Curvature of a CMOS Image-Sensor Using Air-Gap Optimization

  • Kwon, Jong-Hoon;Rhee, Hyug-Gyo;Ghim, Young-Sik;Lee, Yun-Woo
    • Journal of the Optical Society of Korea
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    • v.19 no.6
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    • pp.658-664
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    • 2015
  • Lens designers generally refer to flat image fields and attempt to minimize the field curvature. Present-day CMOS image sensors for mobile phone cameras, however, are not flat, but curved. Sometimes it is necessary to generate an intentional field curvature according to the degree and direction of the CMOS image-sensor’s curvature. This paper presents the degree of curvature of a CMOS image sensor measured using an interferometer, and proposes an effective compensation method that minimizes the net field curvature through optimizing the air gap between lens elements, which is demonstrated using simulations and experiments.

AUTOMATIC ORTHORECTIFICATION OF AIRBORNE IMAGERY USING GPS/INS DATA

  • Jang, Jae-Dong;Kim, Young-Seup;Yoon, Hong-Joo
    • Proceedings of the KSRS Conference
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    • v.2
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    • pp.684-687
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    • 2006
  • Airborne imagery must be precisely orthorectified to be used as geographical information data. GPS/INS (Global Positioning System/Inertial Navigation System) and LIDAR (LIght Detection And Ranging) data were employed to automatically orthorectify airborne images. In this study, 154 frame airborne images and LIDAR vector data were acquired. LIDAR vector data were converted to raster image for employing as reference data. To derive images with constant brightness, flat field correction was applied to the whole images. The airborne images were geometrically corrected by calculating internal orientation and external orientation using GPS/INS data and then orthorectified using LIDAR digital elevation model image. The precision of orthorectified images was validated using 50 ground control points collected in arbitrary selected five images and LIDAR intensity image. In validation results, RMSE (Root Mean Square Error) was 0.365 smaller then two times of pixel spatial resolution at the surface. It is possible that the derived mosaicked airborne image by this automatic orthorectification method is employed as geographical information data.

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General Relativity and Modern Cosmology (일반상대성이론과 현대우주론)

  • Hwang, Jai-Chan
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.40 no.1
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    • pp.57.5-58
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    • 2015
  • We describe relations between modern cosmology and general relativity in the historical context. We reveal some ironies imbedded in Einstein's final correction of his gravitational field equation in the context of cosmology in 1917 which has apparently opened a new era of modern physical cosmology. The ugly (according to Einstein) correction term was introduced only to build a static cosmology which turns out to be in flat contradiction with observation. Somehow, however, it is the correction term which has saved the modern cosmology from the genuine creativity of nature continuously revealed by astronomical observations. Whether the present precision cosmology is also a correct one is often ignored by the practitioners but still a pressing open question left for future theoretical and observational pursuits.

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