Detection of microorganismic flows by linear and nonlinear optical methods and automatic correction of erroneous images artefacts and moving boundaries in image generating methods by a neuronumerical hybrid implementing the Taylor's hypothesis as a priori knowledge

Petermeier H, Kowalczyk W, Delgado A, Denz C, Holtmann F (2007)


Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2007

Journal

Publisher: Springer Verlag (Germany)

Book Volume: 42

Pages Range: 611-623

Journal Issue: 4

URI: http://www.springerlink.com/content/p807m30585667883/fulltext.pdf

DOI: 10.1007/s00348-007-0269-3

Abstract

In biological fluid mechanics powerful imaging methods for flow analysis are required for making progress towards a better understanding of natural phenomena being optimised in the course of evolution. At the same time it is of crucial importance that the measuring and flow visualisation techniques employed guarantee biocompatibility, i.e. they do not distort the behaviour of biosystems. Unfortunately, this restricts seriously the measures for optimising the image generation in comparison to other flow fields in which no biological systems are present. As a consequence, images of lower quality leading to erroneous artefacts are obtained. Thus, either novel detection techniques that are able to overcome these disadvantages or advanced evaluation methods enabling the sophisticated analysis and description of flow fields are essential. In the present contribution, both areas are covered. A novel so-called neuronumerical hybrid allows to detect artefacts in conventional experimental particle image velocimetry (PIV) data of microorganismic flow fields generated by ciliates. The handling of artefacts is performed by the hybrid using a priori knowledge of the flow physics formulated in numerical expressions and the enormous potential of artificial neural networks in predicting artefacts and correcting them. In fact, the neuronumerical hybrid based on the physical knowledge provided by the Taylor's hypothesis can detect not only spurious velocity vectors but also additional phenomena like a moving boundary, in the present case caused by the contraction of the zooid of a microorganism. Apart from the detection of the artefacts, a correction of the spurious velocity vectors is possible. Furthermore, a method to detect microscopic velocity fields based on nonlinear optical filtering, optical novelty filter (ONF) is presented. On the one hand, it can be employed to expose phase changes in flow fields directly from the nonlinear response and without additional tracers. On the other hand, it can be used to preprocess low quality images of flow fields loaded with particles and extract the motion of particles with an enhanced contrast. The flow fields obtained by the correlation based PIV method of the ONF filtered and unfiltered image sequences are compared and discussed. © Springer-Verlag 2007.

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APA:

Petermeier, H., Kowalczyk, W., Delgado, A., Denz, C., & Holtmann, F. (2007). Detection of microorganismic flows by linear and nonlinear optical methods and automatic correction of erroneous images artefacts and moving boundaries in image generating methods by a neuronumerical hybrid implementing the Taylor's hypothesis as a priori knowledge. Experiments in Fluids, 42(4), 611-623. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00348-007-0269-3

MLA:

Petermeier, Hannes, et al. "Detection of microorganismic flows by linear and nonlinear optical methods and automatic correction of erroneous images artefacts and moving boundaries in image generating methods by a neuronumerical hybrid implementing the Taylor's hypothesis as a priori knowledge." Experiments in Fluids 42.4 (2007): 611-623.

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