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  2. Digital image correlation and tracking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_image_correlation...

    Digital image correlation and tracking is an optical method that employs tracking and image registration techniques for accurate 2D and 3D measurements of changes in images. This method is often used to measure full-field displacement and strains , and it is widely applied in many areas of science and engineering.

  3. Displacement mapping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Displacement_mapping

    Displacement mapping is an alternative computer graphics technique in contrast to bump, normal, and parallax mapping, using a texture or height map to cause an effect where the actual geometric position of points over the textured surface are displaced, often along the local surface normal, according to the value the texture function evaluates to at each point on the surface. [1]

  4. Heightmap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heightmap

    A heightmap contains one channel interpreted as a distance of displacement or "height" from the "floor" of a surface and sometimes visualized as luma of a grayscale image, with black representing minimum height and white representing maximum height. When the map is rendered, the designer can specify the amount of displacement for each unit of ...

  5. Diamond-square algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diamond-square_algorithm

    Plasma fractal Animated plasma fractal with color cycling. The diamond-square algorithm is a method for generating heightmaps for computer graphics.It is a slightly better algorithm than the three-dimensional implementation of the midpoint displacement algorithm, which produces two-dimensional landscapes.

  6. Parallax mapping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parallax_mapping

    Parallax mapping with shadows. Parallax mapping (also called offset mapping or virtual displacement mapping) is an enhancement of the bump mapping or normal mapping techniques applied to textures in 3D rendering applications such as video games.

  7. Shear mapping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shear_mapping

    An example is the linear map that takes any point with coordinates (,) to the point (+,). In this case, the displacement is horizontal by a factor of 2 where the fixed line is the x-axis, and the signed distance is the y-coordinate. Note that points on opposite sides of the reference line are displaced in opposite directions.

  8. Parallax occlusion mapping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parallax_occlusion_mapping

    Parallax occlusion mapping (POM) is an enhancement of the parallax mapping technique. Parallax occlusion mapping is used to procedurally create 3D definition in textured surfaces, using a displacement map (similar to a topography map) instead of through the generation of new geometry. [1]

  9. World file - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_file

    x is the column number of the pixel in the image counting from left y is the row number of the pixel in the image counting from top A or x-scale; dimension of a pixel in map units in x-direction B, D are rotation terms C, F are translation terms: x, y map coordinates of the center of the upper-left pixel