Paper
18 January 1988 Personal Computer (PC) Based Image Processing Applied To Fluid Mechanics Research
Y-C Cho, B. G. McLachlan
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
A PC based image processing system was employed to determine the instantaneous velocity field of a two-dimensional unsteady flow. The flow was visualized using a suspension of seeding particles in water, and a laser sheet for illumination. With a finite time exposure, the particle motion was captured on a photograph as a pattern of streaks. The streak pattern was digitized and processed using various imaging operations, including contrast manipulation, noise cleaning, filtering, statistical differencing, thresholding, etc. Information concerning the velocity was extracted from the enhanced image by measuring the length and orienta-tion of the individual streaks. The fluid velocities deduced from the randomly distributed particle streaks were interpolated to obtain velocities at uniform grid points. For the interpolation we used a simple convo-lution technique with aM adaptive Gaussian window. The results are compared with a numerical prediction by a Navier-Stokes computation.
© (1988) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Y-C Cho and B. G. McLachlan "Personal Computer (PC) Based Image Processing Applied To Fluid Mechanics Research", Proc. SPIE 0829, Applications of Digital Image Processing X, (18 January 1988); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.942134
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CITATIONS
Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Image processing

Particles

Photography

Image enhancement

Cameras

Digital image processing

Binary data

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