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The development of Aphelion started in 1995 as a joint project of a French company, ADCIS S.A., [2] and an American company, Amerinex Applied Imaging, Inc. (AAI) [3] Aphelion's image processing and analysis functions were made from operators available from the KBVision software developed and sold by Amerinex's predecessor, Amerinex Artificial Intelligence Inc.
The apsides refer to the farthest (2) and nearest (3) points reached by an orbiting planetary body (2 and 3) with respect to a primary, or host, body (1). An apsis (from Ancient Greek ἁψίς (hapsís) 'arch, vault'; pl. apsides / ˈ æ p s ɪ ˌ d iː z / AP-sih-deez) [1] [2] is the farthest or nearest point in the orbit of a planetary body about its primary body.
2010 GB 174 is a detached object, discovered on 12 April 2010 on data taken at the Canada France Hawaii Telescope as part of the Next Generation Virgo Cluster Survey. [8] [9] It never gets closer than 48.5 AU from the Sun (about the outer edge of the Kuiper belt).
An aphelion is the furthest point of an orbit around the Sun. Aphelion may also refer to: Music. Aphelion (Edenbridge album), 2003; Aphelion (Dave Rempis album), 2014;
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The CellCognition framework uses image processing, computer vision and machine learning techniques for single-cell tracking and classification of cell morphologies. This enables measurements of temporal progression of cell phases, modeling of cellular dynamics and generation of phenotype map.
Its aphelion, or farthest distance from the Sun, is 35 au (5.2 billion km), roughly the orbital distance of Pluto. Unlike the overwhelming majority of objects in the Solar System, Halley's orbit is retrograde; it orbits the Sun in the opposite direction to the planets, or, clockwise from above the Sun's north pole. [44]
ilastik allows user to annotate an arbitrary number of classes in images with a mouse interface. Using these user annotations and the generic image features, the user can train a random forest classifier.