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A close up of my desk and notebook.

Attendees pose with their certificates during the awards ceremony on the final day of the Accelerator Applications Conference held at the Sheraton Hotel in downtown Norfolk, Va., on Thursday, March 21, 2024. (Photo by Aileen Devlin | Jefferson Lab)

 

Accelerator Applications 2024 is the fifteenth international topical meeting on the applications of accelerators; it is being organized jointly by Jefferson Lab and Accelerator Applications Division (AAD) of the American Nuclear Society (ANS). Accelerator Applications 2024 is co-sponsored by the International Symposium On Hydrogen In Matter (ISOHIM), International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and other organizations.

Ramkumar Narayanswamy talks to audience members after his Speaker Series talk.

 

Narayanswamy is leader of Intel’s Computational Imaging Lab. His talk covered partially animated still images, trails and traces of motion captured from the moments prior to a still image, glasses-free 3D, virtual reality and other exciting innovations that he and his colleagues are working on.

 

photo by Ira G. Liss

 

15th Workshop on Logic, Language, Information and Computation

July 1st to 4th, 2008

Heriot-Watt University

Edinburgh, Scotland

from Ville Väänänen's

"Stereographic mobile phone camera"

(photo by Ville Väänänen)

 

find more information about the works on display here:

computationalphoto.mlog.taik.fi/projects/

 

from pixelAche 2011's computational photography thread organised by Markku Nousiainen and Miska Knapek

Recording the movement of Traer Physics T3ndrils and rendering it with Sunflow

computational fluid dynamics openfoam pandoragami

See the full demo (2MB zip of jpegs): adamsmith.as/typ0/ihdemo.zip

 

Key:

- The bottom left image is read directly from the camera (a crappy webcam taped to the wall in my case).

- The bottom right image is the blurred version of the first image.

- The top right image is the blurred version of the background image from last frame (not shown).

- The bottom middle image is the absolute color difference between the two blurred images

- The top middle is a thresholded version of the difference image.

- The top left is the old background image with areas not occluded by foreground objects copied from the freshly captured image below.

See the full demo (2MB zip of jpegs): adamsmith.as/typ0/ihdemo.zip

 

Key:

- The bottom left image is read directly from the camera (a crappy webcam taped to the wall in my case).

- The bottom right image is the blurred version of the first image.

- The top right image is the blurred version of the background image from last frame (not shown).

- The bottom middle image is the absolute color difference between the two blurred images

- The top middle is a thresholded version of the difference image.

- The top left is the old background image with areas not occluded by foreground objects copied from the freshly captured image below.

drawing on canvas with trear physics tendrils using texones creative computing framework which is based on processing

visitor playing with Ville Väänänen's

"Stereographic mobile phone camera"

(photo by Ville Väänänen)

 

find more information about the works on display here:

computationalphoto.mlog.taik.fi/projects/

 

from pixelAche 2011's computational photography thread organised by Markku Nousiainen and Miska Knapek

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