Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
To move from one slice to another requires a base change; from a technical point of view base change becomes a major issue for the whole approach (see for example Beck–Chevalley conditions). A base change 'along' a given morphism g: T → S. is typically given by the fiber product, producing an object over T from one over S.
An example of planar straight-line graph. In computational geometry and geometric graph theory, a planar straight-line graph (or straight-line plane graph, or plane straight-line graph), in short PSLG, is an embedding of a planar graph in the plane such that its edges are mapped into straight-line segments. [1]
The essential property of the tractrix is constancy of the distance between a point P on the curve and the intersection of the tangent line at P with the asymptote of the curve. The tractrix might be regarded in a multitude of ways: It is the locus of the center of a hyperbolic spiral rolling (without skidding) on a straight line.
A 3D point x is projected onto two camera images through lines (green) which intersect with each camera's focal point, O 1 and O 2. The resulting image points are y 1 and y 2. The green lines intersect at x. In practice, the image points y 1 and y 2 cannot be measured with arbitrary accuracy. Instead points y' 1 and y' 2 are detected and used ...
Split and merge segmentation is an image processing technique used to segment an image. The image is successively split into quadrants based on a homogeneity criterion and similar regions are merged to create the segmented result. The technique incorporates a quadtree data structure, meaning that there is a parent-child node relationship. The ...
The intersection point falls within the first line segment if 0 ≤ t ≤ 1, and it falls within the second line segment if 0 ≤ u ≤ 1. These inequalities can be tested without the need for division, allowing rapid determination of the existence of any line segment intersection before calculating its exact point.
Semantic segmentation is an approach detecting, for every pixel, the belonging class. [18] For example, in a figure with many people, all the pixels belonging to persons will have the same class id and the pixels in the background will be classified as background.
A figure explaining point-projection prospective. S is the distance between an observer's eye and an observation point on an object that is a long rectangular wall facing to the observer at a tilted angle. If the observation distance becomes N times longer, then the apparent height of the wall at the observation point is roughly N times smaller.