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Computerised image analysis

The first detailed book to describe the practice and theory of stereology was assembled by two Americans, DeHoff and Rhines (1968) both these men were famous practitioners in their day. There has been a steady stream of books since then a fine, concise and very clear overview is that by Exner (1996). In the last few years, a specialised form of microstructural analysis, entirely dependent on computerised image analysis, has emerged - fractal analysis, a form of measurement of roughness in two or three dimensions. Most of the voluminous literature of fractals, initiated by a mathematician, Benoit Mandelbrot at IBM, is irrelevant to materials science, but there is a sub-parepisteme of fractal analysis which relates the fractal dimension to fracture toughness one example of this has been analysed, together with an explanation of the meaning of fractal dimension , by Cahn (1989). [Pg.204]

Figure 6.28 System of points representing traces of fibres in a cross-section, prepared for analysis in a computerised image analyzer. Figure 6.28 System of points representing traces of fibres in a cross-section, prepared for analysis in a computerised image analyzer.

See other pages where Computerised image analysis is mentioned: [Pg.7]    [Pg.7]    [Pg.457]    [Pg.340]    [Pg.237]    [Pg.169]    [Pg.290]    [Pg.727]    [Pg.1127]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.7 ]




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COMPUTERISED ANALYSIS

Computerisation

Image analysis

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