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  2. Stereoscopy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stereoscopy

    Pocket stereoscope with original test image. Used by military to examine stereoscopic pairs of aerial photographs. Difference in projections of a vertical line in stereoscopy according to distance between left and right eye - animation for eye distance View of Boston, c. 1860; an early stereoscopic card for viewing a scene from nature Stereoscopic image of 787 Orange Street, Addison R. Tinsley ...

  3. Stereoscopic spectroscopy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stereoscopic_spectroscopy

    Stereoscopic spectroscopy is a type of imaging spectroscopy that can extract a few spectral parameters over a complete image plane simultaneously. A stereoscopic spectrograph is similar to a normal spectrograph except that (A) it has no slit, and (B) multiple spectral orders (often including the non-dispersed zero order) are collected simultaneously. [1]

  4. Depth perception - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depth_perception

    If an object is far away, the disparity of that image falling on both retinas will be small. If the object is close or near, the disparity will be large. It is stereopsis that tricks people into thinking they perceive depth when viewing Magic Eyes, autostereograms, 3-D movies, and stereoscopic photos.

  5. Stereoplotter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stereoplotter

    With the introduction of computers, the analytical stereoplotter became a popular machine of choice for photogrammetry in the late 1960s to 1970s. A stereoplotter is an instrument that uses stereo photographs to determine elevations for the purpose of creating contours on topographic maps. Computers brought the capability to execute more ...

  6. 3D stereo view - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3D_stereo_view

    In 1833, an English scientist Charles Wheatstone discovered stereopsis, the component of depth perception that arises due to binocular disparity.Binocular disparity comes from the human eyes having a distance between them: A 3D scene viewed through the left eye creates a slightly different image than the same scene viewed with the right eye, with the head kept in the same position.

  7. Stereoscope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stereoscope

    A stereo transparency viewer is a type of stereoscope that offers similar advantages, e.g. the View-Master. Disadvantages of stereo cards, slides or any other hard copy or print are that the two images are likely to receive differing wear, scratches and other decay. This results in stereo artifacts when the images are viewed.

  8. Epipolar geometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epipolar_geometry

    Two cameras take a picture of the same scene from different points of view. The epipolar geometry then describes the relation between the two resulting views. Epipolar geometry is the geometry of stereo vision. When two cameras view a 3D scene from two distinct positions, there are a number of geometric relations between the 3D points and their ...

  9. Category:Stereophotogrammetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Stereophotogrammetry

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