Explore Scientific Deep Sky Astro Camera 16MP Owner Manual

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Explore Scientific Deep Sky Astro Camera 16MP Owner Manual | Manualzz
EXPLORE-Capture Help Contents
EXPLORE-Capture Help Manual
EXPLORE-Capture Help Manual ............................................ I
1
How to start? ................................................... 1
1.1 How to Start EXPLORE-Capture? .................................... 1
1.2 How to start the camera? ......................................... 1
2
Video window GUI ................................................ 3
2.1 Video window GUI ................................................. 3
2.2 How to close the video window? ................................... 4
3
Image window GUI ................................................ 5
3.1 Image window GUI ................................................. 5
3.2 How to close the image window? ................................... 6
4
5
UI toolbar ...................................................... 9
Camera Sidebar ................................................. 10
5.1 Camera List group ............................................... 10
5.2 Capture & Resolution group ...................................... 10
5.3 Color Balance group ............................................. 11
5.4 Color Adjustment group .......................................... 12
5.5 Frame Rate group ................................................ 12
5.6 Color/Gray group ................................................ 12
5.7 Flip group ...................................................... 13
5.8 Sampling group .................................................. 13
5.9 Bit Depth group ................................................. 13
5.10 ROI group ...................................................... 13
5.11 Histogram group ................................................ 13
5.12 Dark Field Correction .......................................... 14
5.13 Cooling group .................................................. 14
5.14 Parameters group ............................................... 15
6
File ........................................................... 16
6.1 Open Image•••
Ctrl+O.................................... 16
I
EXPLORE-Capture Help Contents
6.2 Open Video•••
6.3 Save
............................................ 18
Ctrl+S ........................................ 19
6.4 Save As••• ...................................................... 19
6.4.1 Option for JPEG ............................................. 20
6.4.2 Option for PNG .............................................. 21
6.4.3 Option for TIF .............................................. 22
6.4.4 Option for the other formats ................................ 22
6.5 Batch Save••• ................................................... 23
6.5.1 Batch Save for a) style image window ........................ 23
6.5.2 Batch Save for b), c) or d) style image window .............. 23
6.6 Paste as New File ............................................... 25
6.7 Recent Files .................................................... 25
6.8 Exit ............................................................ 26
7
Edit ........................................................... 27
7.1 Cut
Ctrl+X ........................................ 27
7.1.1 Cut for the Browse window selected files .................... 27
7.2 Copy
Ctrl+C ........................................ 27
7.2.1 Copy the selected area to the clipboard ..................... 27
7.2.2 Copy for the Browse window selected files to the clipboard .. 27
7.3 Paste
Ctrl+V ........................................ 27
7.3.1 Paste the clipboard files to the Browse window .............. 27
7.4 Paste Shortcut .................................................. 28
7.5 Delete
Delete......................................... 28
7.5.1 For Browse Window file delete ............................... 28
7.6 Image Select
7.7 Select All
............................................ 29
Ctrl+A ......................................... 29
II
EXPLORE-Capture Help Contents
7.7.1 Select all on the video/image window ........................ 29
7.7.2 Select all files in the Browse window ....................... 29
7.8 Select None
Ctrl+D ......................................... 29
7.8.1 Select None for video/image ROI ............................. 29
7.8.2 Select None for Browse window ............................... 30
8
View ........................................................... 31
8.1 Browse
Ctrl+B ........................................ 31
8.1.1 Open the Browse window ...................................... 31
8.1.2 Browse window right mouse button context menu ............... 31
8.2 Sidebar ......................................................... 32
8.2.1 Sidebar overview ............................................ 32
8.2.2 Sidebar>Camera .............................................. 33
8.2.3 Sidebar>Folders ............................................. 33
8.2.4 Sidebar>Undo/Redo ........................................... 34
8.3 Grid ............................................................ 34
8.3.1 Settings•••
....................................... 34
8.3.2 Grids>No Grids .............................................. 35
8.3.3 Grids>Auto Grids ............................................ 35
8.3.4 Grids>Manual Grids .......................................... 35
8.3.5 Grids>Remove All Grids ...................................... 36
8.4 Best Fit
Num * .............................................. 36
8.5 Actual Size
Num / .......................................... 37
8.6 Full Screen
ESC....................................... 37
8.7 Track
................................................ 37
8.8 Crosshairs ...................................................... 37
8.9 Circle .......................................................... 38
8.1 Circle with Hole ................................................ 38
9
Browse ......................................................... 39
9.1 Sort ............................................................ 39
III
EXPLORE-Capture Help Contents
9.1.1 Sort>Sort by Names .......................................... 39
9.1.2 Sort>Sort by Type ........................................... 39
9.1.3 Sort>Sort by Size ........................................... 39
9.1.4 Sort>Sort by Width .......................................... 39
9.1.5 Sort>Sort by Height ......................................... 39
9.1.6 Sort>Ascending
................................... 39
9.1.7 Sort>Descending
................................... 39
9.2 Icon ............................................................ 40
9.2.1 Icon>Large Icons
................................... 40
9.2.2 Icon>Small Icons
................................... 40
9.3 Refresh
F5 ............................................. 40
9.4 Properties•••
10
........................................... 40
Setup .......................................................... 42
10.1 Start/Pause
10.2 View Properties•••
Pause .................................... 42
Shift+V ............................... 42
10.3 ST4 Test ....................................................... 42
11
Capture ........................................................ 44
11.1 Capture Image
F8 ................................... 44
11.2 Auto Capture
F7 ........................................ 44
11.3 Start Record
F9 ................................... 47
11.4 Batch Record
(F10)..................................... 48
12
Image .......................................................... 50
IV
EXPLORE-Capture Help Contents
12.1 Mode ........................................................... 50
12.1.1 Color Quantize••• .......................................... 50
12.1.2 Gray Scale ................................................. 50
12.1.3 Contrast Preserving Decolorization ......................... 50
12.2 Adjust ......................................................... 51
12.2.1 Brightness/Contrast••• ..................................... 51
12.2.2 Color••• ................................................... 51
12.2.3 HMS••• ..................................................... 54
12.2.4 Curve••• ................................................... 54
12.2.5 Filter Color••• ............................................ 56
12.2.6 Extract Color••• ........................................... 56
12.2.7 Invert ..................................................... 57
12.2.8 Edge Preserving Smooth••• .................................. 57
12.2.9 Detail Enhance••• .......................................... 58
12.3 Rotate ......................................................... 58
12.3.1 90(CW) ..................................................... 58
12.3.2 180(CW) .................................................... 58
12.3.3 270(CW) .................................................... 59
12.3.4 Arbitrary••• ............................................... 59
12.3.5 Flip Horizontal
12.3.6 Flip Vertical
12.4 Crop
12.5 Image Scale•••
12.6 Histogram•••
13
................................... 59
.................................. 59
Shift+C ....................................... 59
....................................... 61
Shift+H ................................... 61
Process ........................................................ 64
13.1 Stitch•••
Shift+T................................... 64
13.1.1 Video Stitch ............................................... 64
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EXPLORE-Capture Help Contents
13.1.2 Image Stitch ............................................... 67
13.1.3 Browse Window Stitch ....................................... 69
13.1 Denoise ........................................................ 71
13.1.1 Adaptive Wiener Filter ..................................... 71
13.1.2 Bilaternal Filter••• ....................................... 71
13.1.3 Non Local Means••• ......................................... 72
13.1 Sharpen ........................................................ 73
13.1.1 USM••• ..................................................... 73
13.1.2 Laplacian Sharpen .......................................... 74
13.1 Color Toning ................................................... 74
13.1.1 Gamma•••
............................................ 74
13.1.2 Histogram Equalization•••
Shift+Q ....................... 75
13.1.3 LCC••• ..................................................... 76
13.1.4 AMSR ....................................................... 77
13.2 Deinterlace .................................................... 77
13.3 Filter•••
Shift+I ........................................ 78
13.3.1 Image Enhance .............................................. 78
13.3.2 Edge Enhance ............................................... 81
13.3.3 Morphological .............................................. 82
13.3.4 Kernel ..................................................... 84
13.4 Image Stacking•••
13.1 Range•••
.................................. 86
Shift+R ............................................ 88
13.1 Binary•••
Shift+B ........................................ 89
13.1 Pseudo Color••• ................................................ 90
13.1 Surface Plot••• ................................................ 90
14
Options ........................................................ 92
14.1 Preferences•••
........................................ 92
14.1.1 Record Page ................................................ 92
14.1.2 Batch Record Page .......................................... 93
14.1.3 Auto Capture ............................................... 94
VI
EXPLORE-Capture Help Contents
14.1.4 File Page .................................................. 96
14.1.5 Grids Page ................................................. 97
14.1.6 Video Page ................................................. 97
14.1.7 Misc Page .................................................. 98
15
Window ........................................................ 100
15.1 Close All ..................................................... 100
15.2 Reset Window Layout ........................................... 101
15.3 Windows•••
16
........................................... 101
Help .......................................................... 103
16.1 Help Contents
F1 .................................. 103
16.2 About••• ...................................................... 103
VII
How to start
1
How to start?
1.1 How to Start EXPLORE-Capture?
1. Invoke the Windows metro start screen with keyboard button
EXPLORE-Capture
, locate
and click it to start the application(Win 8/10);
2. Click the Start button (At your screen bottom left corner) and a Start menu will bring
up. Move your mouse over the menu and try to locate EXPLORE-Capture, click to start it
(Win XP/7);
3. Double click on the desktop icon “
” (If installed) to start EXPLORE-Capture;
1.2 How to start the camera?
EXPLORE-Capture will detect all of the cameras that your computer has installed (Here,
it is EXPLORE_DS_CAMERA_16.0MP, a 16M pixel USB3.0 CMOS cooling camera) and will
list all the camera names under the Camera List group on the Camera Sidebar
Click the Camera Sidebar (If it is not activated) and the Camera List to expand the
Camera List group (if not expanded).
1
How to start
Click the camera name (Here it is EXPLORE_DS_CAMERA_16.0MP) to start the video
window and the camera will begin to stream the video. The video window will be
associated with a name called “Video [EXPLORE_DS_CAMERA_16.0MP]” (i.e., its title
bar name will be “Video [EXPLORE_DS_CAMERA_16.0MP]”).
2
Video Window GUI
2
Video window GUI
2.1 Video window GUI
A:EXPLORE-Capture;
B: Menu;
C:EXPLORE-Capture toolbar;
D:Camera Sidebar ;
E: Folders Sidebar ;
3
Video Window GUI
F: Undo/Redo Sidebar ;
G: Histogram;
H:Statusbar;
I: Auto Hide button;
J: Horizontal ruler;
K:Vertical ruler;
L:Camera Name;
M:Frame Rate and Frames captured;
N:Current Video sizes;
O:Current Temperature;
AA: Title Bar right mouse button context menu;
AB: Sidebar right mouse button context menu;
AC: Video window right mouse button context menu;
AD: Toolbar right mouse button context menu
AE: Camera Sidebar right mouse button context menu;
AF: Horizontal Ruler or Vertical Ruler right mouse button context menu
AG: Grids submenu;
AH: Double-click bring up Video Properties dialog;
AI: Double-clicking bring up Temperature display style setup dialog;
2.2 How to close the video window?
1 Double-clicking the tabbed video window title or clicking x on
will close the video
window directly;
2. Choose the Windows>Close All command to close the video window;
3. Click the right mouse button on the video window title to invoke the context menu and
choose Close to close the video window;
4. Press Ctrl+W.
4
Image window GUI
3
Image window GUI
3.1 Image window GUI
5
Image window GUI
A:EXPLORE-Capture;
B: Menu;
C:EXPLORE-Capture toolbar
D:Camera Sidebar ;
E: Folders Sidebar ;
F: Undo/Redo Sidebar ;
G: Sidebar;
H:Statusbar;
I: Auto Hide button;
J: Horizontal ruler;
K:Vertical ruler;
L:The Opened file directory and name;
M:Image file resolution;
N:Image Zoom ratio double-clicking will zoom the image to 100%;
AA: Title Bar right mouse button context menu;
AB: Sidebar right mouse button context menu;
AC: Video window right mouse button context menu;
AD: Toolbar right mouse button context menu;
AE: Horizontal Ruler or Vertical Ruler right mouse button context menu;
AF: Grids submenu;
AG: Double-click bring up Video Properties dialog;
AH: Double-click bring up Scale Image dialog;
AI: Zoom ratio right mouse button context menu;
3.2 How to close the image window?
1. If you have modified an image before attempting to close it, double-clicking the
tabbed image window title or clicking x on
will bring up a EXPLORE-Capture dialog:
Clicking Yes will save the changes with its old name and close the window quickly, No will
6
Image window GUI
close the file immediately with no changes and no warning, or Cancel will cancel the
Close command and leave the window there with no changes;
2. If the Image window is snapped from the video window and with number as its title,
double-clicking the tabbed image window title or clicking x on
will bring up a
warning EXPLORE-Capture dialog:
Clicking Yes will bring up the Save As dialog.
In the Save As dialog, choosing
Save in: Select the driver and folder to which you want your image file saved in the
Save in combobox and enter the file name in the File name edit box;
Save: Click Save to save the captured image with the specified directory and file
name;
Cancel: Click Cancel to close the Save As dialog and return to image window.
Click No on the EXPLORE-Capture dialog will close the file immediately with no changes
and no warning.
7
Image window GUI
Click Cancel on the EXPLORE-Capture dialog will cancel the Close command and return
to image window.
3. Press Ctrl+W;
Choosing the Window>Close All command can also close the tabbed image window.
Please check the Window>Close All for detail.
8
UI toolbar
4
UI toolbar
When the camera is started or the image is opened (or captured), most of the icons on
the toolbar will be enabled for the quick operation of the video or image window.
1: Open (Ctrl + O);
2: Save (Ctrl + S);
3: Quick Save (Quick Save);
4. Auto Capture (F7)
5. Batch Record(F10)
6: Zoom;(Ctrl+ or Ctrl-)
7: Video/Image Select;
8: Track(enabled only when the video/image size is larger than the window size);
9: Crosshairs for the star alignment;
10: Circle for the star alignment;
11:Circel with hole;
12: ST4 Test;
13: Previous Frame;
14: Next Frame;
15: Image Stitch;
16:Preferences (Shift+P)
9
Camera Sidebar
5
Camera Sidebar
The Camera Sidebar is used for the control
of camera, it includes many groups (14).
The group can be expanded by a) clicking
the group name or b) clicking the Double
Down Arrow at the right end of the group
name.
5.1 Camera List group
Camera List will list all of the cameras connected to the
computer that support the EXPLORE-Capture application.
Click the camera name will start the camera video window.
5.2 Capture & Resolution group
Snap: Continuously Snap images by clicking it;
Record: Record video stream with the supported formats;
Resolution: Set the video resolution;
Format: Video format, could be RGB or Raw format;
Gain: If and only if the brightness is too low to meet the
Exposure Time up limit, drag the Gain slide right until the
video brightness is normal;
Video Mode: The application will continuously display the
video in the Video window;
Auto Exposure: Uncheck the Auto Exposure box to switch
the Auto Exposure mode to the Manual Exposure mode.
The Exposure Target slider will be disabled in this mode;
When the Capture & Resolution group is expanded and the
Auto Exposure button is checked,a green rectangle
10
Camera Sidebar
marked with “Exposure” will be overlaid on the video
window. This marked region is a reference region for
judging if the image average brightness reaches to the
Exposure Target value. Drag the Exposure ROI to the
darker area will increase the video brightness and drag it
to the brighter area will decrease the video brightness;
Uncheck the Auto Exposure box to switch the Auto
Exposure mode to the Manual Exposure mode. The
Exposure Target slider will be disabled in this mode;
Exposure Time: Drag the Exposure Time slider to the left or right until the image
brightness is normal; The exact Exposure Time can also be entered by clicking the edit
box at the right end of the Exposure Time. This will bring up a dialog called Exposure
Time. You can type the number in the field to set the exact Exposure Time value.
Trigger Source: User can choose the Software or Hardware Trigger mode;
Exposure Time: Can be set in h(hour), m(minute), s(second), ms(millisecond) and
us(microsecond);
Single: Snap a single image to the Video window(The Single button will change to the
Stop button after it is clicked);
Loop: Continuously snap the image to the Video window until the Stop button is
clicked(The Loop button will change to the Stop button after it is clicked);
Sequence: Snap a specified number of images to the separate Image windows (The
Sequence button will change to the Stop button after it is clicked). After the process is
finished or the Stop button is clicked, the Sequence capture will be stopped and the Stop
button will changed to the Sequence button for the next clicking;
Options: This button will invoke a Sequence Options dialog and to set the Sequence
Options such as show the snapped image in the window or save it to disk. User can also
choose the Directory File prefix, File type etc. for the image file to save.
5.3 Color Balance group
1.Click the color balance bar to expand the color balance group and a red rectangular
marked with white balance will be overlaid on the video window;
2. Drag the red rectangle to a pure white or gray area and click the white balance button
to establish the video white balance for future video streaming process;
11
Camera Sidebar
3. If the White Balance automatic setting result and the
actual one still has deviation, drag the Red, Green or Blue
slides to the left or right to manually correct the White
Balance.
5.4 Color Adjustment group
1. Hue: Adjusts the Hue of the video. Drag the slider to
the right to increase or drag to the left to decrease Hue;
2. Saturation: Adjusts the Saturation of the video. Drag
the slider to the right to increase or drag to the left to
decrease video Saturation;
3. Brightness: Adjusts the video Brightness. Drag the
slider to the right to increase or drag to the left to
decrease the video Brightness;
4. Contrast: Adjusts the video Contrast. Drag the slider to the right to increase or drag
to the left to decrease the video Contrast;
5. Gamma: Adjusts the video Gamma. Drag the slider to the right to increase or drag to
the left to decrease the video Gamma;
6. Defaults: Click the Defaults to clear all the changes and reset them to default ones;
7. All of your settings will be saved for future Color Adjustment group.
5.5 Frame Rate group
Drag the slider to the right (High) to ensure that the
camera can run the video at the fastest Frame Rate
that the computer’s USB hub supports. If the video
fails to display, drag the slider to the left (Low) to
reduce the Frame Rate and this will enable the video to
stream in a low speed mode.
5.6 Color/Gray group
12
Camera Sidebar
If you wish to preview Color video, choose the “Color”
button, otherwise, choose the Gray button.
If you wish to preview Gray video, check the “Gray”
button.
5.7 Flip group
If the video on the screen appears in different
directions from what is viewed under the camera,
check the “Horizontal” or “Vertical” box to set the video
direction to the right one.
5.8 Sampling group
1. Bin: Pixel binning refers to the method of combining
(averaging) pixels of blocks of neighboring same color
pixels to resize the video to the lower resolution;
2. Skip: Also called "Decimation", means that a certain amount of pixels are not read out
but skipped (horizontally, vertically or in both axes). This reduces resolution of the
resulting video but introduces subsampling artifacts.
5.9 Bit Depth group
Switch between 8 bits and 12 bits. 8 bits is the basic
Windows image format. 12bits will have higher image
quality but moderate frame rate speed.
5.10 ROI group
ROI, Region of interest. This function can set the ROI on
the video window. When the ROI group was expanded, a
dotted rectangle with "Handles" will
appear around the video window that will let you alter the ROI. Use mouse button to
adjust the ROI size. If ROI is ok, click Apply will set the video to ROI size, Defaults will
return to the original one.
5.11 Histogram group
1. A Histogram illustrates how pixels in an image are distributed by graphing the number
of pixels at each color intensity level. The Histogram shows detail in the shadows (shown
in the left part of the histogram), midtones (shown in the middle),
13
Camera Sidebar
and highlights (shown in the right part). A Histogram
can help you determine whether an image has enough
detail to make a good correction;
2. This group shows the Histogram of current active
video. Two vertical line markers show the upper and
lower limits of the intensity levels. These markers can
be dragged with mouse. If you are looking at a color
image, the Histogram will reflect the RGB(red, green
and blue channels histogram at the same time) R(red),
G(green), and B(blue) values with lines of the same
color;
3. You can also enter directly the desired values in the Left or Right boxes below the
Histogram chart for both Left and Right Histogram boundaries;
4. Click the “Refresh” button to update the Histogram display if the sample under
observation is moved or changed;
5. Clicking the Defaults button will return the Left and Right Histogram boundaries to its
original ones;
6. Click the Auto button to locate the two boundaries automatically to get the best video
quality.
5.12 Dark Field Correction
To Enable the Dark Field Correction, one should
capture the dark field image first. After the images are
captured, the Enable button will be enabled. Check it
will enable the Dark Field correction. Uncheck it will
disable the Dark Field Correction.
5.13 Cooling group
The Cooling group is only available for those who have TE-cooling hardware inside the
camera.
TEC On: The Cooling will be enabled when this button is chosen;
TEC Target: The final temperature value wished;
TEC Off: The Cooling will be disabled when this button is chosen;
14
Camera Sidebar
Fan On: Open the fan will accelerate the cooling speed;
Fan Off: Stop the fan will lower the fan sound noise but
decrease the cooling speed.
5.14 Parameters group
The Parameters group is used to save the camera control
parameters set for further application.
Click Save will save
the current camera control
parameters with new parameter file and then the Load
and Overwrite buttons will be enabled.
Click Load will load the saved camera control parameters;
Click Overwrite will overwrite the current camera control parameters to the current
loaded active camera control parameters file;
Click Management will invoke a Management dialog and in this dialog, one can manage
all of the saved Parameter files.
15
File
6
6.1 Open Image•••
File
Ctrl+O
Choose the File>Open Image••• command to open an existing image file. The Open
Image••• command can also be used to preview an image in small size, or to view its
statistics and information without actually opening the image itself. These capabilities
can be used to quickly locate a particular image.
EXPLORE-Capture supports and can open many image formats. These are identified in
the Files of type list box.
More than one image can be opened within EXPLORE-Capture simultaneously by a) with
Ctrl + left mouse button method and b) Shift + left mouse button method to highlight
the files to be opened. In this mode, the Preview window will be disabled.
When opening an image, EXPLORE-Capture places it into a new image window. It then
becomes the active window.
Note: EXPLORE-Capture maintains, at the File>Recent Files submenus, a list of the last
4(Can be 1-8) opened files. Any of these files can be accessed by simply clicking on file
16
File
name. If no files are listed in the File>Recent Files submenu, the Open Image•••
command must be used to open the file.
Also, the View>Browse(Ctrl+B) command can be used to view images in an Icon format
under any selected directory. Brief information is given in the View>Browse menu.
File name: From this list box, select the name of the file want to open. Either the type of
the file name (with its entire path, if it is not in the current folder), or selecting Files of
type to obtain a list of File names. Double-clicking a file name in the large combo box
(where both folder and file names are listed) will automatically open it.
Note: If just type in the File name, be sure that the Files of type field correctly identify
the format of the file to open. Otherwise error messages will bring up when
EXPLORE-Capture tries to open the file.
Files of type: In this list box, select the image format of the file to open. If one selects All
supported formats, EXPLORE-Capture uses the file's extension to identify its format.
EXPLORE-Capture supports the following file formats:
Window Bitmap(*.bmp,*.dib,*.rle)
JPEG(*.jpg,*.jpeg,*.jpe,*.jif,*.jfif)
Portable Network Graphics(*.png)
Tag Image File Format(*.tif, *.tiff)
Compuserve GIF (*.gif)
PCX(*.pcx)
Targa(*.tga)
PhotoShop(*.psd)
ICON(*.ico)
Enhanced Window Metafile(*.emf)
Window Metafile(*.wmf)
JBIG(*.jbg)
Wireless Bitmap(*.wbmp)
JPEG 2000 Standard(*.jp2)
JPEG 2000 Codestream(*.j2k)
Digital Negative (*.dng)
Ser (*.ser)
17
File
Fits(*.fit;*.fits)
If the image file does not use standard format-identifying extensions, the file in the File
name field must be typed, and then select its format from the Files of type list box.
Otherwise, EXPLORE-Capture will select a format based on the file name extension.
Preview: Click this button to preview image in small size. In preview mode, statistics and
information about the image (i.e. image Width, Height and image location) will be
displayed. The default is no Preview.
Current File: Current File location on your computer;
Width: Current File image width;
Height: Current File image height;
6.2 Open Video•••
The File>Open Video••• menu will be enabled only when there is no video file opened in
the EXPLORE-Capture frame or no camera was opened.
1. Choose the File>Open Video••• command to open an existing video file;
2. Select the name of the file you want to open. If the file does not appear, select the
option for showing all files from the Files of Type combobox. The video file type can be
any one as shown below.
3. Click Open to open a video file, this will create a video window and begin to start the
video stream. The video window will be associated a name called “Video [XXX.XXX]”
(i.e., its title bar will display “Video [XXX.XXX]”, here, XXX.XXX is the video file name).
18
File
4. Click Cancel to return to the application.
Note: Only a single video can be opened at a time. EXPLORE-Capture takes camera as
a special video file, if the camera was opened, this menu will be disabled and the video
file cannot be opened anymore.
6.3 Save
Ctrl+S
Choose the File>Save command to immediately store the current window image to its
file (the file name is listed on the window's title bar) while leaving the image still active
in its window.
If the image is untitled or titled with a digit, EXPLORE-Capture will issue the File>Save
As••• dialog automatically. The default “Save as type” will be “Window Bitmap
(*.bmp,*.dib,*.rle)”.
The File>Save command can be used to save the most recent changes to disk. It is often
performed as a precautionary measure during lengthy or involved processes to reduce
the amount of reprocessing that might be required in the event of a system failure or
operational error. When an image is closed and not to save its changes is chosen,
EXPLORE-Capture discards all changes made since the last File>Save operation.
Note: a).The File>Save command always saves the contents of the entire window, even
if there is an AOI (Area of Interest) defined on it; b).The File>Save command will be
disabled if the file is not changed or the changes have been saved.
6.4 Save As•••
Choose the File>Save As••• command to store the contents of the current window to a
specified file format. At the end of a File>Save As••• operation, the image window will
be associated with the new file and the new format (i.e., its title bar will display the new
file name).
EXPLORE-Capture supported file save formats are:
Window Bitmap(*.bmp,*.dib,*.rle)
JPEG(*.jpg,*.jpeg,*.jpe,*.jif,*.jfif)
Portable Network Graphics(*.png)
Tag Image File Format(*.tif, *.tiff)
19
File
Compuserve GIF (*.gif)
PCX(*.pcx)
Targa(*.tga)
JBIG(*.jbg)
JPEG 2000 Standard(*.jp2)
JPEG 2000 Codestream(*.j2k)
Fits(*.fit)
Save in: Find the folder where the file wishes to be saved. A new folder may be created
using the New Folders button;
File name: The file name to be saved. To specify the file's location, either enter its entire
path (disk and folder), or specify its location using the Save in list box;
Save as type: In this list box, select the format in which the image wants to be saved.
Save As••• is also used to convert a single image from one format to another. For
example, if a TIFF file needs to convert to PCX format, open the TIFF image first, then
choose Save As••• command with the PCX format to save it to a new file.
The default “Save as type” will be “Window Bitmap (*.bmp,*.dib,*.rle)”. The Save As
command has several important uses beyond simply storing an image to a new file
name. Click Option to select the different parameters to encode the file.
6.4.1 Option for JPEG
For JPEG (*.jpg,*.jpeg,*.jpe,*.jif,*.jfif), Option has the following items:
20
File
Image quality: If one save an image in JPEG format (*.jpg), one may adjust image
quality in the edit box. The values range from 0 to 100. Default value: 75;
Progressive: The default is unchecked;
Optimize Huffman codes: The default is unchecked;
Smoothing: The values range between 0 and 100. Default value: 0;
Save these setting as defaults: When saving a file, the current settings will be saved as
defaults for the next file save operation.
6.4.2 Option for PNG
For Portable Network Graphics (*.png), Option has the following items:
Interlaced: The default is unchecked;
Save these setting as defaults: When saving a file, the current settings will be saved as
defaults for the next file save operation.
21
File
6.4.3 Option for TIF
For Tag Image File Format (*.tif, *.tiff), the Option has the following items:
Appended pages: Determine whether the current image will be saved in multiple pages
style or not;
Compressions: Specifies a method for compressing the composite image data. For
saving a 32 ‑ bit TIFF file, one can specify that the file be saved with predictor
compression, but have no option to use JPEG compression. Predictor compression offers
improved compression by rearranging floating point values, and works with both LZW
and ZIP compression;
Image quality: If choosing Compressions as "JPEG", the Image quality can be adjusted
by the slider bar. The values range between 0 and 100. Default value: 75;
Save these setting as defaults: When saving a file, the current settings will be saved as
defaults for the next file save operation.
6.4.4 Option for the other formats
For
Compuserve GIF (*.gif); PCX(*.pcx); Targa(*.tga); JBIG(*.jbg); FITS(*.fit) there
is no Option.
Note: a) Detailed information of the above academic terminologies can be found in
books about image processing and image compression or internet; b) The file saved
directory can be restored for future use. To keep the directory unchanged when
EXPLORE-Capture is started again, choose Options>Preferences••• command, click
Misc page and check Restore the current directory when startup under the Privacy item.
22
File
6.5 Batch Save•••
The File>Batch Save••• menu will be enabled when a) an image is opened; b)an image
is captured from the camera; c)an image window is created by choosing the File>Paste
as New File command; d)an image window is copied from the Undo/Redo Sidebar with
the copy button as show below:
6.5.1 Batch Save for a) style image window
If the image is modified, choosing the File>Batch Save••• command will save the file
with its opened file name and file extension;
6.5.2 Batch Save for b), c) or d) style image window
If the image window has been created with b), c) or d) style, choosing the File>Save
As••• command to realize the file saving task will be time-consuming. The Batch
Save••• command will runs File>Save As••• command with the name automatically
specified according to the paradigm specified in the Batch Save dialog
To start the File>Batch Save••• command for b) style image window, you have to
1. Start the camera;
2. Snap at least an image first;
3. Choosing the File>Batch Save••• command will bring up a Batch Save dialog:
23
File
Directory: Enter the name of the drive and directory where your captured images will be
saved. You may either type the path information, or use the Browse button to locate it
from a standard Browse Folder dialog.
Name Format: The year, month, date, hour, minute and second or nnnn(sequence) are
used to as part of the file name. If more files are saved with in a second, a (xx) suffix is
attached to the end of Name Format to avoid the possible name conflict. For the
nnnn(sequence) “Name Format”, no suffix is needed.
File Prefix: Enter a file name prefix for Batch Save when generating files names for a
series of images. This prefix will be combined with Name Format to form a final file name
naming paradigm.
File Type: In this combobox, select the format you want the image to be saved (can be
BMP, JPG, PNG, TIF, FIT). The parameters for encoding the file (For BMP or FIT format,
there is no options). See Options>Preferences•••>File page, choosing the file format
line and click Config••• button for more details. Or check the Options>Preference>File
in Sec.14.1.4
Sample: The final file name is shown at the right of the Sample label for reference.
4. If the setting in the Batch Save dialog was finished, click OK button to begin the file
batch save process or Cancel to cancel the Batch Save command and return to the
application.
For the c) or d) style image window, only steps 3 and 4 are needed.
Note: a) In the process of the File>Batch Save••• command, the title on the image tab
or image window will be modified with the file name paradigm in the Batch Save dialog.
24
File
b) The File>Batch Save••• will perform no saving operation if the file is not modified or
unchanged.
6.6 Paste as New File
The File>Paste as New File menu will be enabled only when there is valid image data on
the clipboard first (see the Edit>Copy menu). If there is no image data on the clipboard,
the File>Paste as New File menu will be disabled.
Choose the File>Paste as New File command to place the contents of the clipboard
image into a new image window, which becomes the active window.
The new image type will be the same as that of the original image. EXPLORE-Capture
will accept image data from other applications via the clipboard as long as it is in
Windows Bitmap (DIB) format.
Note: EXPLORE-Capture will assign a digit to the Paste as New File command created
image window’s title bar.
6.7 Recent Files
EXPLORE-Capture maintains 4 (default) most recently opened document files under the
Recent Files menu. Choosing one of these submenus will reopen that file immediately.
Note. a) The maximum number of Recent Files can be modified by choosing the
Options>Preferences••• command and clicking the Misc page as shown below:
Here, clicking the 4 (default) edit box will allow you to enter the number of the Recent
Files submenus that you want. The value ranges from 0 to 8, the default is 4; b) One can
25
File
also check the Clear the Recent Files when exit the application to clear the Recent Files
after exit EXPLORE-Capture application.
6.8 Exit
Choosing the File>Exit command will close the video window, all of the image windows
and the Browse window. After all of the windows are closed, EXPLORE-Capture will end
itself.
Note: If an image has been modified before attempting to Exit it, EXPLORE-Capture will
issue a warning to ask if user want to save the image or not first.
If multiple images have been modified before attempting to Exit it, EXPLORE-Capture
will issue Save Files dialog to direct the user to save changes in different ways.
See Window>Close All for details.
26
Edit
7
7.1 Cut
Edit
Ctrl+X
The Edit>Cut menu will be enabled only when image file(s) in the Browse window is (are)
selected.
7.1.1 Cut for the Browse window selected files
When the Browse window is active and the image files in the browse window are
selected, the Edit>Cut command will be enabled. Choosing the Edit>Cut command will
copy it to the clipboard. After the file(s) is(are) pasted, the file(s) will be deleted.
Note:
The
Edit>Cut
command
does
not
support
image
Cut
operation
in
EXPLORE-Capture.
7.2 Copy
Ctrl+C
7.2.1 Copy the selected area to the clipboard
In the video window or image window, choose the Edit>Copy command to Copy an video
or image's selected area to the clipboard.
Note: When an image ROI is selected, the Edit>Copy menu will be enabled.
7.2.2 Copy for the Browse window selected files to the clipboard
When the Browse window is active and the image files in the Browse window are
selected, the Edit>copy command will be enabled. Choosing the Edit>Copy command
will then copy them to the clipboard.
Note: The copied files on the clipboard can be pasted into the Browse window by
choosing the Edit>Paste or Browse>Paste shortcut command.
7.3 Paste
Ctrl+V
If there is (are) image file(s) on the clipboard and the current active window is the
Browse window, the Edit>Paste menu will be enabled.
7.3.1 Paste the clipboard files to the Browse window
When the Browse window is active and the image files in the Browse window are
selected, the Edit>Paste command will be enabled. Choosing the Edit>Paste command
27
Edit
will paste the clipboard files to the Browse window.
Note: The Edit>Paste command does not support the image area Paste operation.
7.4 Paste Shortcut
This command is for the Browse window only. This menu will be enabled when files in the
Browse window are selected and the Edit>Copy command is executed to copy the file
shortcut to the clipboard. Choose this command will create the clipboard files
Shortcut(in *.lnk format) in the current Browse window directory.
If the to be pasted *.lnk file has been existed in the current Browse window,
EXPLORE-Capture will pop up a prompt dialog.
One can click Yes, No or Cancel to overwrite, abort or cancel the command.
7.5 Delete
Delete
The Browse>Delete File menu will be enabled if the file(s) is (are) highlighted in the
Browse window. This command is for the Browse window only.
You can Delete or remove one or more files from the Browse window. The steps are as
follows:
7.5.1 For Browse Window file delete
1. Select one or more files by a) Clicking the displayed file icons, a single file will be
highlighted; b) Clicking the file one by one with Ctrl + left mouse button, all of the
clicked files will be highlighted; c) Clicking the displayed file icons, the first clicked file
will be highlighted, clicking the end file with Shift + left mouse button, all of the files
among the first and last will be highlighted. d) Dragging the mouse to draw a dotted line
rectangle across the files you wish to delete, all of the files in the rectangle will be
highlighted; e)Ctrl+A to select whole files in the Browse window.
2. a) Press the Delete key to delete the selected files; b) Click you right mouse button to
28
Edit
bring up a context menu, choose the Delete command to delete the highlighted files. A
Confirm File Delete dialog will bring up.
In the Confirm File Delete dialog, click Yes to move the files to the desktop recycle bin,
or No to cancel the Delete operation.
7.6 Image Select
The Edit>Image Select command can be used to mark ROI and Copy the selected ROI to
the clipboard. This command is only used to select the image ROI.
Choosing the Edit>Image Select command will check this menu (or click
toolbar will keep
down) and the cursor will turn into “
on the
”. The ROI selection steps
are described as below:
1. After the Edit>Image Select command is chosen, drag the mouse cursor across the
image with the left button held down until the area is selected;
2. Release the left button and the area will be marked. Handles will appear on the area
edge that will allow altering the selection after it is marked.
7.7 Select All
Ctrl+A
7.7.1 Select all on the video/image window
When the video/image window is active, choosing the Select All command will select all
pixels on the video/image within the canvas (shortcut: Ctrl+A).
7.7.2 Select all files in the Browse window
When the Browse window is active, choosing the Edit>Select All command will select all
of the files in the Browse window under the specified directory in the Folders Sidebar.
7.8 Select None
Ctrl+D
Deselect a) any selected area (ROI) on the image; b) the file listed in the Browse
window.
7.8.1 Select None for video/image ROI
When a video or image area is selected, the Select None menu will be enabled. Choosing
29
Edit
the Edit>Select None command will delete the dotted rectangle representing the
selected area (ROI).
7.8.2 Select None for Browse window
When the Browse window is active and the image files in the browse window are
selected, the Edit>Select None command will be enabled. Choosing the Edit>Select
None command will deselect all of the selected files in the Browse window.
30
Edit
8
8.1 Browse
View
Ctrl+B
8.1.1 Open the Browse window
1. Choose the View>Browse menu or click the Browse toolbar button
will open or
active browse images under the specified directory in the Folders Sidebar;
2. Click the Folders Sidebar to activate it and double-clicking the listed directory in the
Folders Sidebar will create the Browse window.
After creating the Browse window, EXPLORE-Capture will display a Browse window that
looks like windows explorer. The child window on the left part of the Browse window
called Folders Sidebar is used to locate the directory on the hard disk. Images in the
current directory are displayed in Large Icons or Small Icons mode on the right side of
the Browse window.
Image file’s order can be set in Ascending or Descending order according to Sort by
Name, Type, Size, Width or Height et al.
8.1.2 Browse window right mouse button context menu
Clicking the right mouse button on the listed Icon in the Browse window will bring up a
right mouse button context menu as shown below:
These context menu functions are described in
Edit>Cut
Browse >Sort>Sort by Names
Edit>Copy
Browse >Sort>Sort by Type
31
Process>Stitch
Edit
Edit>Paste
Browse >Sort>Sort by Size
Edit>Paste
Browse >Sort>Sort by Width
Shortcut
Browse >Sort>Sort by Height
Edit>Delete
Browse >Sort>Ascending
Browse >Sort>Descending
Browse >Icon>Large Icons
Browse >Icon>Small Icons
Browse >Refresh
Browse >Properties
menus. Please check them for details.
Note: The Folders Sidebar and the Browse can be used to perform tasks such as creating
new folders, renaming, moving, and deleting files. Individual file information and import
data from digital cameras can also be displayed. Double-clicking the left mouse button
on the icon will open the image as an active image in full size. See Image window GUI in
Sec.3 for more details.
8.2 Sidebar
There are 3 Sidebars in the EXPLORE-Capture frame window in tabbed style. They are
Camera Sidebar, Folders Sidebar and Undo/Redo Sidebar.
8.2.1 Sidebar overview
AA: Camera Sidebar;
AB: Camera Sidebar groups for the control of the camera.
32
Edit
BA: Folders Sidebar;
BB: Back to the previous folder;
BC: Forward to the next folder;
BD: Browsing the pictures under the application’s file directory;
BE: Open the Browse window if it is not opened (Double-clicking on the selected
directory will perform the same functions.);
BF: Folders to locate the Browse window’s file directory.
CA: Undo/Redo Sidebar;
CB: Forward to the previous step;
CC: Backward to the next step;
CD: Operation Copy: Copy the highlighted operation in the Undo/Redo Sidebar to a new
image window; User can also drag the selected operation in the Undo/Redo Sidebar to
the window area to create a new image window;
CE: Remove the highlighted operations from the Undo/Redo list (This button will be
enabled only when the operation(s) is (are) selected, the opened image(the first
operation) cannot be removed;
CF: Indicating the Current operation displayed in the image window;
CG: Operation Index;
CH: Operation name.
8.2.2 Sidebar>Camera
The Camera Sidebar is mainly used for the control of camera, it includes many groups.
Each group can be expanded by clicking the group name or the arrow button at the right
of the group name.
Checking the Sidebar>Camera menu will activate/show it on sidebar group.
Please check Camera Sidebar in Sec.5 for details.
8.2.3 Sidebar>Folders
The Folders Sidebar is mainly used for the image Browse control.
Checking the View >Sidebar>Folders menu will activate/show the Folders Sidebar.
Clicking its tree can navigate the file directories.
Double-clicking the directory in the Folders will create the Browse window. If there are
33
Edit
image files under the directory that EXPLORE-Capture supports to Browse, the image
files will be displayed in Large or Small icons mode.
Their orders can be set in Ascending or Descending styles according to Sort by Name,
Type, Size, Width or Height et al.
Clicking the right mouse button on the directory will bring up the right mouse context
menu as shown below:
This is the basic window explorer menu and will not be explained in this manual.
8.2.4 Sidebar>Undo/Redo
The Undo/Redo Sidebar is used to list the Undo/Redo operations for the Image and
Process menus’ command.
Checking the View>Sidebar>Undo/Redo menu will activate/show the Undo/Redo
Sidebar.
8.3 Grid
The Grid menu has 5 submenus, they are:
8.3.1 Settings•••
Choosing the View>Grid>Setting••• command, or choosing the Preference>•••
34
Edit
command and clicking the Grids page realize the same function.
Choosing the Option>Preference>••• command and clicking the Grids page can set the
Grid Style, Line Style, and Line Color for the Grid overlaid on the video and image
window can also be set.
Style: The Grid Style can be No Grid, Auto Grid or Manual Grid. Default is No Grid;
Line Style: The Line Style for the grid can be Solid, Dash, Dot or DashDot et al. Default
is Solid;
Color: The color of the grid line. Default is Red (255,0,0).
8.3.2 Grids>No Grids
Choosing this command will remove both Manual Grids and Auto Grids overlaid on the
video/image window.
8.3.3 Grids>Auto Grids
Choose Grids>Auto Grids command to overlay the grids on the video/image
automatically.
The Auto Grids can be set in the View>Grids>Setting••• menu.
8.3.4 Grids>Manual Grids
Choosing this command will display two small Right Arrow and Down Arrow overlaid on
the top of the Vertical Ruler and on the left of the Horizontal Ruler as shown below:
Down Arrow: Move the mouse over the Down Arrow will show a horizontal drag icon.
Drag the Down Arrow along the Horizontal Ruler to where ever you want. When it is
35
Edit
dragging over the video/image, there will be a Vertical line appeared to let you judge
where to release this line on the video/image. You can drag any lines to overlay them on
the video/image.
The overlaid lines can be adjusted by dragging the specific Down Arrow again on
Horizontal Ruler.
Right Arrow: Move the mouse over the Right Arrow will show a vertical drag icon. Drag
the Right Arrow along the Horizontal Ruler to where ever you want. When it is dragging
over the video/image, there will be a Horizontal line appeared to let you judge where to
release this line on the video/image. You can drag any lines to overlay them on the
video/image.
The overlaid lines can be adjusted by dragging the specific Right Arrow again on Vertical
Ruler.
Choose the Grids>No Grid command to remove the Manual Grids overlaid on the
video/image window. The menu will be checked.
Choose the Grids>Manual Grids command again (If it is unchecked) to display all the
previous Manual Grids overlaid on the video/image window. The menu will be checked.
8.3.5 Grids>Remove All Grids
Remove (Delete) all of the Manual Grids or Auto Grids overlaid on the image/video
window.
8.4 Best Fit
Num *
Choose View>Best Fit command to automatically resize the video/image to fit in the
36
Edit
window.
Note: Choosing this command will enable View>Actual Size menu.
8.5 Actual Size
Num /
Note: This option will be disabled if the image is currently viewed at 100%. At any other
zoom ratio, View>Actual Size will be enabled.
Choose View>Actual Size command to set the active image to its Actual Size (e.g.
100%).
8.6 Full Screen
ESC
Choosing the View>Full Screen command will display the video window in full screen
style. Press the ESC button will restore the video window.
8.7 Track
Note: If the video/image size is smaller than the window size. The track operation will be
disabled.
If the image's actual size is larger than the video/image window, check this command to
position the video/image that does not fit entirely within in the video/image window. Its
function is similar to the scroll bars. It is an alternative to using the arrows on the scroll
bars for positioning the video/image within the window.
Checking the View>Track menu will change the cursor to
and the button on the
toolbar will be checked.
Then keep down the mouse button to drag the region of interest on the video/image to
any location in the video/image window.
8.8 Crosshairs
Display the Crosshairs to locate the star in the video window. Click the left mouse button
on the video window to move the Crosshairs to wherever interested.
37
Edit
8.9 Circle
Display the Circle to locate the star in the video window. Click the left mouse button on
the video window to move the Circle to wherever interested.
8.1 Circle with Hole
Display the Circle with Hole to locate the star in the video window. Click the left mouse
button on the video window to move the Circle with Hole to wherever interested.
38
Browse
9
Browse
9.1 Sort
9.1.1 Sort>Sort by Names
This command is for the Browse window only.
Sort the image files in order of names in the Browse window.
9.1.2 Sort>Sort by Type
This command is for the Browse window only.
Sort the image files in order of file type in the Browse window.
9.1.3 Sort>Sort by Size
This command is for the Browse window only.
Sort the image files in order of file size in the Browse window.
9.1.4 Sort>Sort by Width
This command is for the Browse window only.
Sort the image files in order of image file width in the Browse window.
9.1.5 Sort>Sort by Height
This command is for the Browse window only.
Sort the image files in order of image file height in the Browse window.
9.1.6 Sort>Ascending
This command is for the Browse window only.
Sort the image files in order of the Ascending mode (i.e. 1, 2, 3 and 4) in the Browse
window.
9.1.7 Sort>Descending
This command is for the Browse window only.
Sort the image files in order of the Descending mode (i.e. 4, 3, 2 and 1) in the Browse
window.
39
Browse
The Sort settings are saved until they are changed. For example, if you sort images in
the Browse window according to the Type, the images will remain sorted according to
Type until the Sort settings are changed.
9.2 Icon
9.2.1 Icon>Large Icons
This command is for the Browse window only.
The Thumbnail mode displays small preview images; you can select different view
modes in the Browse window.
Choosing the Icons>Large Icons will display the image files in Large Icon mode in the
Browse window.
9.2.2 Icon>Small Icons
This command is for the Browse window only.
The Thumbnail mode displays small preview images; you can select different view
modes in the Browse window.
Choosing the Icons>Small Icons will display the image files in Small Icon mode in the
Browse window.
9.3 Refresh
F5
This command is for the Browse window only.
If the files under the Folders Sidebar’s directory are altered outside of EXPLORE-Capture,
after switch back to EXPLORE-Capture, one can Refresh the image files in the current
directory to update the Thumbnails with Browse>Refresh command.
9.4 Properties•••
If an image file listed in the Browse window is highlighted. Choosing the
Browse >Properties command or clicking the selected file in the Browse window with the
right mouse button context menu Properties will bring up a Properties dialog as shown
40
Browse
below:
The file Properties dialog including 3 pages. They are General, Security and Details
pages. These Property pages may depend on the operating system and we will not
discuss it in this help manual.
41
Setup
10 Setup
10.1 Start/Pause
Pause
If the video in video window is playing, one can choose the Setup>Start/Pause
command to pause the video and choose the Setup>Start/Pause command again to
start the video again.
10.2 View Properties•••
Shift+V
The Setup>View Property••• will help you to understand the camera hardware
statistical properties. Choose the Setup>View Property••• command to invoke the View
Property dialog as below:
The items in the dialog are described in the following:
Device Name: Readable string to identify the name of the camera device;
Pixel Size: The current camera pixel size;
Still Image Capture: To identify whether or not the camera supports Still Image Capture.
Still Image Capture is used for high resolution camera to capture an image with a
different resolution from the video. This feature is mainly used to capture high resolution
image under low resolution video to compromise between the frame speed and the
image resolution;
Video Width: The actual video window video width;
Video Height: The actual video window video height;
10.3 ST4 Test
The Setup>ST4 Test command will invoke a ST4 dialog for the test of the guiding
camera’s ST4 port. Click the arrow key to test if it is OK. The central edit box can input
42
Setup
the time for the test.
43
Capture
11 Capture
11.1 Capture Image
F8
During the video preview, you can always choose the Capture>Image Capture
command to capture the video image.
After the image is captured, the captured image will become the current active window.
The Capture>Capture Image menu will be disabled. If you wish to capture image again,
click the video window title to activate the video window and the Capture>Capture
Image menu will be enabled again.
Note: a) The “Snap” button
on the Camera Sidebar can continuously snap
the image even if the video window is not activated. User can click this button on the
Camera Sidebar to capture image in quick style; b) Only when the video window is
active, the Capture>Capture Image menu will be enabled; c) If the Live and Snap
resolutions are different, EXPLORE-Capture need to switch the resolution from Live to
Snap resolution in the backstage to capture an image with Snap resolution. After the
Snap is finished, EXPLORE-Capture will switch back to the Live resolution to continus
the video stream process. This will take more time to capture a still image.
11.2 Auto Capture
F7
Choosing the “Capture>Auto Capture” command or press the toolbar button
will
begin to capture the image from the video stream automatically.
After begin to capture, the “Capture>Auto Capture” will changed to “Capture>Stop
Capture” and the toolbar button
will be checked.
Choosing the “Capture>Stop Capture” command or press the checked toolbar button
will stop the auto capture process.
The “Capture>Stop Capture” menu will changed to “Capture>Auto Capture” and the
44
Capture
toolbar button
will be unchecked.
The Auto Capture command needs to define some predefined parameters. This can be
done in Options>Preferences•••>Auto Capture property page:
Directory: Enter the name of the drive and directory where the new image will be saved.
You may either type the path information, or use the Browse button
to locate it
from a standard Browse Folder dialog;
Name Format: The year, month, date, hour, minute and second or nnnn(sequence) are
used as part of the file name. If more files are saved with in a second, a (xx) suffix is
attached to the end of Name Format to avoid the possible name confliction. For the
nnnn(sequence) Name Format, no suffix is needed.
File Prefix: Enter a file name prefix for Auto Capture when generating files names for a
series of images. This prefix will be combined with Name Format to form a final file name
according to the naming paradigm.
File Type: In this combobox, select the format in which you want the image to be saved
(can be BMP, JPG, PNG, TIF, FIT);
Sample: The final file name is shown at the right of the Sample label for reference;
Capture every frame: Check this item will capture every frame in the video sequence;
Time Slot(second): Capture an image according to the time interval to (0-100S, default
45
Capture
is 6);
Total Images: Checking Total Images will enable its edit box. You can enter the Total
Images (1-9999, the default is 100) to be captured. EXPLORE-Capture will stop the Auto
Capture process automatically when the Total Images are reached;
If Total Images is unchecked, EXPLORE-Capture will capture the images continuously
until user choose the Capture>Stop Capture command again to stop the Auto Capture
process.
After the Auto Capture is started, the Capture>Auto Capture menu will be changed to
the Capture>Stop Capture) menu. Choosing this command will stop the Auto Capture
process.
There are a variety of image format available (they are bmp, jpg, png, tif or fit) to save
the captured image. For example, when choosing jpg format, the save options can be
set in Options>Preferences•••>File property page. If the format has options need to be
define, the Config••• button will be enable.
Clicking the Config••• button will pop up a dialog as bellow. Different format has
different options.
After all the parameters are set. Click OK will close the dialog and the parameters can be
used for the Auto Capture command with no further setup to accelerate the capture
process.
46
Capture
11.3 Start Record
This
command
will
F9
begin
to
record
the
video
according
to
the
setup
in
Options>Preference>Record property page (See Sec.14.1.1)
1.
You can a) choose the Capture>Start Record••• command; b) click “Record” button
on the Camera Sidebar ; c) use the shortcut key “F9” to start recording
movies.
2.
After the video record is started. The
will become
. Clicking
button on the Camera Sidebar
will stop the capture process,
otherwise, it will stop untill the Time Limit in Options>Preference>Record page is
47
Capture
reached. After the video record process is finished. The
Camera Sidebar will become
on the
again for the future Record process;
User can choose the File>Open Video••• command to display the captured video file in
the video window;
After the Capture>Start Record is in the process, the Capture>Batch Record or the
Batch Record button on the toolbar will be disabled.
11.4 Batch Record
(F10)
Begin to record the video in batch mode. This command will allow the user to record the
video
in
a
quick
way.
The
Batch
Record
parameters
is
defined
in
the
Options>Preferences•••>Record and Options>Preferences•••>Batch Record property
pages (See Sec.14.1.1 and 14.1.2) for details.
After the Batch Record is begin, the application will begin to record the 1st video until the
stop condition is reached (see Options>Preferences•••>Record).
Then after the Time interval is reached in the Options>Preferences•••>Batch Record
page, the application will begin to record the 2nd or the next video.
The Batch Record will stop until the Number is reached in the Options>Preferences•••>
Batch Record page.
48
Capture
After the Batch Record is begin, the Capture>Start Record menu will changed to
Capture>Stop Record menu (The
change to
button on the Camera Sidebar will
) and the Batch Record menu and toolbar button
disabled. User can choose Capture>Stop Record menu or click the
will be
button
to stop the current recording process.
Note, this command will not stop the Batch Record process, after the condition of the
Time interval in the Options>Preferences•••>Batch Record page is reached, the
application
will
begin
to
record
the
next
frame
until
the
Number
in
the
Options>Preferences•••> Batch Record page is reached.
To stop the whole Batch Record process, only when the previous record is stopped or
finished and the next record does not begin, in this interval, the
it will stop the whole Batch Record process.
49
will be enable, click
Image
12 Image
12.1 Mode
12.1.1 Color Quantize•••
The Color Quantize••• command is widely used to change the image bit.
EXPLORE-Capture supports the mutual changes among 24 bit, 8 bit, 4bit or 1 bit
images.
When the Colour Bits dialog is opened, the
default checked color bits is the current image's
color bit. Check the desired bit and click OK to
end the command. The image will converted to
the selected color bits in the image window.
12.1.2 Gray Scale
Choose the Gray Scale command to convert a color image (true color image or index
color image) to a gray scale image. If the original image is 24 bit, the new image is 8 bit.
Otherwise the bits of the image will not be modified.
12.1.3 Contrast Preserving Decolorization
Choose the Image>mode>Contrast Preserving Decolorization command can convert
the color image into gray image with contrast preserved. The following pictures (a) is
the original microscopic image, (b) is the gray image produced by traditional method, (c)
is the gray image produced by Contrast Preserving Decolorization.
(a)
(b)
Original microscopic image
Traditional method
(c) Contrast Preserving Decolorization
50
Image
12.2 Adjust
12.2.1 Brightness/Contrast•••
The Image>Adjustment>Brightness/Contrast••• command offers simple adjustments
to the tonal range of an image. This command makes the same adjustment to every
pixel in the image. The Brightness/Contrast command does not work with individual
channels and is not recommended for high-end output because it can result in the loss
of details about the image.
Brightness: Dragging the slider bar to the left decreases the level and dragging it to the
right increases the level. The numbers on the right of the slider bar displays the
Brightness value. Values can range from -100 to +100. Default is 0;
Contrast: Dragging the slider bar to the left decreases the level and dragging it to the
right increases the level. The numbers on the right of the slider bar displays the Contrast
value. Values can range from -100 to +100. Default is 0;
12.2.2 Color•••
Choose the Image>Adjustment>Color••• command to modify the overall mixture of the
colors in an image.
There are four color modules: RGB, CMYK, HIS and HLS.
RGB: EXPLORE-Capture uses the RGB model. It assigns an intensity value to each pixel
ranging from 0 (black) to 255 (white) for each of the RGB components in a color image.
For example, a bright red color might have an R value of 246, a G value of 20, and a B
value of 50. When the values of all three components are equal, the result is a shade of
51
Image
neutral gray. When the value of all components is 255, the result is pure white; when the
value is 0, pure black.
RGB images use 3 channels to reproduce up to 16.7 million colors on-screen. In addition
to being the default mode for new EXPLORE-Capture images, the RGB mode is used by
computer monitors to display colors. This means that when working in color modes
other than RGB, such as CMYK, EXPLORE-Capture uses RGB mode for display
on-screen.
Although RGB is a standard color mode, the exact range of colors represented can vary,
depending on the application or display device.
CMYK: The CMYK mode is based on the light-absorbing quality of ink printed on papers.
As white light strikes translucent inks, certain visible wavelengths are absorbed while
others are reflected back to the eyes.
In theory, pure cyan (C), magenta (M), and yellow (Y) pigments should combine to
absorb all light and produce black. For this reason these colors are called subtractive
colors. Because all printing inks contain some impurities, these three inks actually
produce a muddy brown and must be combined with black (K) ink to produce a true
black. (K is used instead of B to avoid confusion with blue.) Combining these inks to
reproduce color is called four-color process printing.
The subtractive (CMY) and additive (RGB) colors are complementary colors. Each pair of
subtractive colors creates an additive color, and vice versa.
HSI: Based on the human perception of color, the HSI model describes 3 fundamental
characteristics of colors:
52
Image
Hue is the color reflected from or transmitted through an object. It is measured as a
location on the standard color wheel, expressed as a degree between 0°and 360°. In
common use, Hue is identified by the name of the color such as red, orange, or green.
Saturation, sometimes called chroma, is the strength or purity of the color. Saturation
represents the amount of gray in proportion to the hue, measured as a percentage from
0% (gray) to 100% (fully saturated). On the standard color wheel, Saturation increases
from the center to the edge.
Intensity is the relative lightness or darkness of the color, usually measured as a
percentage from 0% (black) to 100% (white).
HLS: The HLS model is very similar to the HLS color model. The main difference between
them is the calculation used to produce the brightness value. In the HLS model, a pixel's
brightness (L) is derived from its three (R, G and B) color values. In the HLS model, a
pixel's brightness (L) is determined by the minimum and maximum values of its three
color values.
The values beside the slider bar show the color changes in various color channels.
For RGB channel values, they are range from -100 to +100. Default is 0;
For CMYK channel values, they are range from -100 to +100. Default is 0;
For HSI channel values, the H value can range from -180 to 180, the S value is range
53
Image
from -275 to 275, and the I value is range from -442 to 442.Default is 0;
For HLS channel values, the H value is range from -180 to 180, the L value is range from
-100 to 100, and the S value is range from -100 to 100. Default is 0;
12.2.3 HMS•••
Choose the Image>Adjustment>HMS••• command to adjust the HL (Highlight), M
(Midtone), and S(Shadow) parts of the image. Each part's value ranges from -100 to
100. This command is only available for 24 bits true color image.
12.2.4 Curve•••
Choose the Image>Adjust>Curve••• command to adjust the entire tonal range of an
image. But instead of making adjustments using only three variables (Highlight,
Midtone, Shadow), one can adjust any point on the curve along a 0-255 scale while
keeping up to any other values constant. One can also use Curve to make precise
adjustments for individual color channels on an image. The Curve dialog is shown below:
Horizontal Axis: The horizontal axis of the graph represents the original intensity values
of the pixels (Input levels).
Vertical Axis: The vertical axis represents the new color values (Output levels). In the
54
Image
default diagonal line, all of the pixels have identical Input and Output values.
Curve area: Area (specified with the blue rectangle) to setup a map between input and
output;
a) When you open the Curve dialog you see, perhaps surprisingly, not a curve but a
straight line. As a default, the input values are the same as the output, so there’s no
change;
b) By clicking in the center of the line and dragging upwards, we make our first
curve. Raising the curve increases the overall brightness of the scene.
c) Conversely, clicking in the center and dragging downwards lowers the brightness,
producing an image that’s darker overall;
d) As well as clicking in the center, we can also adjust the endpoints. Clicking the top
right point and dragging down limits the brightest part of the image, reducing
contrast.
e) If we drag that top right point to the left rather than down, we produce the
opposite effect—increasing the contrast of the image. This is a very useful and
controllable quick fix;
f) By dragging the top and bottom points towards the center, we create a stylized,
posterized effect that turns any photograph into more of a graphic object.
g) Click once in the center of the RGB curve to "pin" that midpoint; now drag just the
top half of the curve to make this S shape, and the result is to increase the overall
contrast.
h) You can add up to any control points to the curve, locking those values. To remove
a control point, 1)drag it off the graph or 2)click the right mouse button on that point.
You cannot delete the endpoints of the curve.
a)
b)
55
c)
d)
Image
e)
f)
g)
h)
Grid: Check to overlay the grid on the Curve window;
Channel
: To adjust the color balance of the image, check the channel(R, G or
B) from the Channel button. Check the white button to select RGB channels at the same
time, which is located on the left of the R (Red), G (Green) and B (Blue) buttons;
Curve
: Click the Curve with your left mouse button, a spline curve (straight line) will
setup the initial input-output relation. Click on the Curve will mark the Curve with a point.
The point number can be any as long as it can be inserted on the Curve. Drag the
marked point until the image looks satisfactory. The point can be deleted by move the
mouse on it and click the right mouse button on it.
Pencil
: Check the pencil button at the bottom of the dialog, and use your left mouse
button to draw a new arbitrary Curve in the Curve area.
Reset: Click the Reset button will reset the Curve to the initial straight line.
Apply: Apply current Curve map on the image.
12.2.5 Filter Color•••
Choose the Image>Adjustment>Filter Color command to filter a special color channel
from a color image. Check either Red, or Green, or Blue color to filter. For every pixel, if
check Red color to filter, only information about the red channel will be discarded, and
Green and Blue information will remain there.
See Image>Extract Color••• for another color operation.
12.2.6 Extract Color•••
56
Image
Choose the Image>Adjustment>Extract Color••• command to extract a special color
channel from a color image. Check either Red or Green, or Blue color to extract.
For every pixel, if selecting Red color to extract, only information about the red channel
will be kept, and Green and Blue information will be discarded.
See Image>Filter Color••• for another color operation.
12.2.7 Invert
Choose the Image>Adjustment>Invert command to reverse the pixel values of the
active image without going through the lookup table.
12.2.8 Edge Preserving Smooth•••
Edge Preserving Smooth is an image processing technique that smooth away textures
whilst retaining sharp edges. Examples are the Bilateral filter, the Guided filter and
Anisotropic diffusion.
Choose the Image>Adjust>Edge Preserving Smooth••• command can smooth the
entire image and preserve the edge of image, as shown below:
Edge Preserving Smooth function provide two kinds of filter including Recursive and
Normalized Convolution filter, and the default filter is Recursive.
EXPLORE-Capture use Spatial Sigma and Range Sigma to define the filter kernel size.
The bigger the two parameters, the stronger the image smoothed, vice versa.
57
Image
12.2.9 Detail Enhance•••
Choose the Image>Adjust>Detail Enhance••• command can enhance the detail in the
image, as shown below:
EXPLORE-Capture choose Spatial Sigma and Range Sigma to define the kernal size of
detail enhance algorithm. The bigger the 2 parameters, the stronger the enhanced
image and vice versa.
The following picture is the detail enhanced image for reference with default parameter.
a)Original image and b)Enhanced image
12.3 Rotate
Choose the Image>Rotate command to rotate the entire image. One has the following
submenus:
12.3.1 90(CW)
Rotate the image clockwise by a quarter-turn.
12.3.2 180(CW)
Rotate the image clockwise by 180 degrees.
58
Image
12.3.3 270(CW)
Rotate the image clockwise by 270 degrees.
12.3.4 Arbitrary•••
Rotate the image by a specified angle. If choosing this option, enter an angle between 0
and 360 degrees in the angle text box, and check CW or CCW to rotate clockwise or
counterclockwise. For the Arbitrary••• operation, it will invoke an Image Rotate dialog
like below:
Degree: The degree that the image to be rotated.
CW: Rotates the image clockwise.
CCW: Rotates the image counterclockwise.
Quality: One can select one of the three methods for the image rotation among Nearest
Neighbor, Bilinear, and Bicubic. The default is Bilinear.
12.3.5 Flip Horizontal
Reverses the image in the application area so that the top right corner of the original
image is now the top left, and the top left corner of the original image is now the top
right corner.
12.3.6 Flip Vertical
Reverses the image in the application area so that the top right corner of the original
image is now the bottom right corner, and the top left corner of the original image is now
the bottom left corner.
12.4 Crop
Shift+C
Choose the Image>Crop command to remove the portions of an image that does not
59
Image
want so that the focus is on the part of the image that is left. This document instructs
users on how to Crop an image in EXPLORE-Capture.
1. Choose the Open Image••• command to open an image to Crop;
2. Choose the Edit> Image Select command or click the Image Select button
on
the Toolbar, the cursor will change to a small cross.
3. Move the cursor over the image to the desired location, click the mouse button and
hold it down to mark the first position.
4. Drag the mouse over the part of the image to be kept, a dotted rectangle appears
around the selection and release the left mouse button.
5. Optional 1: To move the rectangle: a) Move the mouse over the selected area and
when it becomes a move cursor, click and hold the left mouse button;b) Drag the
selected area to the desired position.
6. Optional 2: To change the size of the rectangle: a) Put the mouse cursor on one of the
handles that appear on the edges of the selected area; b) Click and hold the mouse
button; c) Drag the box to the desired size.
Note: Each of the handles that appear on the edges of the box sizes the box differently.
7. To Crop the image, choose the Image>Crop command or press Shift+C buttons.
Note: If the selected area is on the video, choosing the Image>Crop command will
60
Image
capture the selected area and display it on a new image window.
12.5 Image Scale•••
Choose the Image>Image Scale••• command to change the image to a specified size.
This process actually changes spatial resolution by adding (replicating) or removing
(decimating) pixels to achieve the specified dimensions.
Width and Height: When choosing the Image Scale command; the dialog displays the
dimensions of the original image in pixels. The Width and the Height can be set on the
new image by adding or removing pixels. If Constrain Proportions is checked, the Width
and Height will stay proportionate to each other. If Constrain Proportions is unchecked,
the Width and the Height can set independently, but this will distort the image.
Reset: Reset the image Width and Height to the original ones.
Constrain Proportions: To maintain the current proportions of pixel Width and Height,
check Constrain Proportions. This option automatically updates the Width as the Height
is modified, and vice versa. Otherwise, uncheck the Constrain Proportions button.
Scale method: There are 3 options for the Scale method. They are: Nearest Neighbor,
Bilinear, and Bicubic. The default is Bilinear.
12.6 Histogram•••
Shift+H
A Histogram illustrates how pixels in an image are distributed by graphing the number of
pixels at each color intensity level. The Histogram shows whether the image contains
enough detail in the Shadows (shown in the left part of the Histogram), Midtones (shown
in the middle), and Highlights (shown in the right part) in order to make a good
correction.
The Histogram also gives a quick picture of the tonal range of the image, or the image
61
Image
key type. A low-key image has detail concentrated in the shadows, a high-key image has
detail concentrated in the highlights, and an average-key image has detail concentrated
in the Midtones. An image with a full tonal range has a number of pixels in all areas.
Identifying the tonal range helps determine the appropriate tonal corrections.
Choose the Image>Histogram••• command to open the Histogram dialog as shown
below.
Depending on the image’s color mode, choose R, G and B, or Luminosity to view a
composite Histogram of all the channels.
If the image is RGB true color, choose Luminosity to display a Histogram representing
the luminance or intensity values of the composite channel.
If the image is RGB true color, choose R, G and B to display a composite Histogram of the
individual color channels in color.
Do one of the following:
To view information about a specific pixel value, place the mouse pointer in the
Histogram.
To view information about a range of values, click down the left mouse button and drag
62
Image
it in the Histogram to highlight the range.
The dialog displays the following statistical information below the Histogram:
Pixels: Represents the total number of pixels used to calculate the Histogram.
Level: Displays the intensity level of the area underneath the pointer.
Count: Shows the total number of pixels corresponding to the intensity level underneath
the pointer.
Percentile: Displays the cumulative number of pixels at or below the level underneath
the pointer. This value is expressed as a percentage of all of the pixels in the image, from
0% at the far left to 100% at the far right.
63
Process
13 Process
13.1 Stitch•••
Shift+T
Image stitching or photo stitching is the process of combining multiple photographic
images with overlapping fields of view to produce a segmented panorama or
high-resolution image. Commonly performed through the use of computer software,
most approaches to image stitching require nearly exact overlaps between images and
identical exposures to produce seamless results. Some digital cameras can stitch their
photos internally. Image stitching is widely used in today’s world in applications such as
“Image Stabilization” feature in camcorders which use frame-rate image alignment,
high resolution photo mosaics in digital maps and satellite photos, medical imaging,
multiple image super-resolution, video stitching and object insertion.
EXPLORE-Capture also integrated this function into it. It includes Video Stitch, Image
Stitch and Browse Window Stitch.
13.1.1 Video Stitch
When the video window is active, choosing the Process>Stitch••• command will invoke
the video Stitch dialog as below:
Capture Images
Snap: Click to capture image from camera. One should try to move the slide to a prop
position to capture the desired images. In the moving process, the next image should
have some overlaid area with the previous left or up image to ensure the success of the
stitching process.
64
Process
Reset: When an image or images is or are captured, the Reset button will be enabled,
click Reset will remove it or them from the memory;It will be disabled when there is no
captured image;
Snap: The captured images from the camera;
Cancel: Click to cancel the stitching process;
Next>: Click Next> will step to the next step;
Finish: Click Finish will accept the other Default setup and begin to stitch the captured
images according to the above setup.
Stitching Method
Panorama Straighten: The image stitching direction. It can be Horizontal, Vertical and
None. Default is Horizontal;
Projection Type: For image segments that have been taken from the same point in space,
stitched
images
can
be
arranged
using
one
of
various
map
projections.
EXPLORE-Capture including Plane, Cylindrical, Spherical, Fisheye, Stereographic,
Mercator or Transverse Mercator map projections. The Default is Cylindrical;
Seam Finder: Seam Finder method, EXPLORE-Capture including None, Voronoi Diagram,
Graph Cut Color or Graph Cut Color Grad. Default is Graph Cut Color;
Exposure Compensation: Exposure Compensation is required between images to
minimize exposure differences. EXPLORE-Capture including None, Gain or Blocks Gain
65
Process
Exposure Compensation method. Default is Blocks Gain;
Bundle Adjust: Bundle Adjustment can be defined as the problem of simultaneously
refining the 3D coordinates describing the scene geometry as well as the parameters of
the relative motion and the optical characteristics of the camera(s) employed to acquire
the images, according to an optimality criterion involving the corresponding image
projections of all points. EXPLORE-Capture including Ray adjust or Reprojection error
adjust method. Default is Ray adjust;
<Back: Click <Back will return to the previous setup page;
Next>: Click Next> will step to the next step;
Finish: Click Finish will accept the other Default setup and begin to stitch images
according to the above setup;
Cancel: Click to cancel the stitching process;
Stitching Parameter
Match Confidence: 1~100, Default is 65;
Panorama Confidence: 1~100, Default is 100;
Match Strength: 0~100, Default is 25;
Blend Strength: 0~100, Defaults is 5;
Defaults: Click Defaults will set all the parameters to the Default ones.
66
Process
<Back: Click <Back will return to the previous step;
Finish: Click Finish will begin to stitch images according to the above setup. After the
Finish button is clicked, EXPLORE-Capture will start to stitch and a progress dialog will
be shown to indicate the progress of the process.
Cancel: Click to cancel the stitching process;
The final stitched image will be created in a new image window.
In the stitched image, there are some black areas; these are happened when there are
translations among the edge images in both directions.
13.1.2 Image Stitch
If images are opened in EXPLORE-Capture, for example 0001.jpg, 0002.jpg, 0003.jpg,
0004.jpg are opened as shown below:
67
Process
Choosing the Process>Stitch command will invoke the image Stitch dialog as shown
below:
a)
Available Images and b) Selected Images
Available Images: The images opened by EXPLORE-Capture;Here, 4 images are listed
in the list box. One can click the image file name to select the files to be added to the
Selected Images;
Selected Images: The images selected for stitching;Using Add>> to add the Available
Images to this list box;
Add>>: When an image or images is or are selected and highlighted in the Available
Images window, the Add>> will be enabled. Click Add>> will add it or them into the
Selected Images list box;
Add All>>: Click Add All>> will add all of the Available Images into the Selected Images
list box;
68
Process
Remove: When an image or images is or are selected and highlighted in the Selected
Images list box, the Remove button will be enabled, click Remove will remove it or them
from the Selected Images list box;
Clear: Used to clear all of the images in the Selected Images list box. When no image in
the Selected Images list box, it will be disabled;
Cancel: Click to cancel the stitching process;
Finish: Click Finish will accept the other Default setup and begin to stitch the captured
images according to the above setup;
Next>: Click Next> will step to the next step;
The other Next> steps are just the same as those of the Video Stitch process.
The final stitched image will be created in a new image window as shown below:
The Stitched image
In the stitched image, there are some black areas; these are happened when there are
translations among the edge images in both directions.
13.1.3 Browse Window Stitch
Click the Folders Sidebar to activate it. Double-click the right directory to show the
images under the directory in the Browse window. Choosing the image files to be
69
Process
stitched and then clicking the right mouse button will display the context menu, choose
the Stitch submenu to start the image stitch operation (One can also choosing
Process>Stitch to do the same operation after the files are selected in the Browse
window)
After the Stitch command is selected, a dialog called Stitch will pop up as shown below.
The Stitch dialog and the other Next> steps are just the same as those of Video Stitch.
The final stitched image will look like below:
In the stitched image, there are some black areas; these are happened when there are
translations among the edge images in both directions.
70
Process
The stitched image
13.1 Denoise
EXPLORE-Capture provides 3 types of noise removal methods, Adaptive Wiener Filter,
Bilateral Filter, Non Local Means. The processing speed of the 3 methods is from fast to
slow, and the denoising quality is getting better and better. Each method is described in
detail in the following:
13.1.1 Adaptive Wiener Filter
The Adaptive Wiener Filter can preserve more image details than those of median filter,
mean filter, Gauss filter. The effect is more remarkable for additive noise (such as
Gaussian noise) and multiplicative noise (such as Poisson noise).
For the Adaptive Wiener Filter algorithm, please find the details in the relevant
literatures, here only to illustrate the improvement of Adaptive Wiener Filter over the
classical Wiener filter.
In the classical Wiener filter, the image noise intensity requires the user to manually
input, but it is difficult to accurately enter the accurate value even for experienced users,
because the value is usually very small, such as 0.0036781. Therefore in the
development of the Adaptive Wiener Filter, the noise level is automatically calculated
according to the image mean variance.
The process is quite simple, open an image, choose the Process>Denoise>Adaptive
Wiener Filter to denoise the image.
13.1.2 Bilaternal Filter•••
The Bilateral Filter is a nonlinear filtering method that considers image spatial proximity,
pixel value similarity, image spatial information and gray level similarity to achieve the
purpose of edge preserving denoising. The Bilateral Filter has the simple, non-iterative,
local characteristics. The Bilateral Filter is good to preserve image edge compare with
Wiener filter or Gauss filter.
Choosing Process>Denoise>Bilateral Filter••• will pop-up dialog called Bilateral Filter as
shown below:
71
Process
Value domain: the range of neighborhood pixel in radius for considering, the greater the
value, the slower process speed.
Space domain: Sigma value, the higher the value, the more effective the denoising
effect.
13.1.3 Non Local Means•••
The traditional local mean filter is a pixels average method around the target pixel, but
the Non Local Means is a weighted average method to average all of the image patches
over the search window. The weight is determined according to the similarity between
the target patch and neighborhood patches in the search window.
Compared to other famous denoising algorithms, such as Gaussian, Wiener filter, total
variation and wavelet denoising, The Non Local Means method can get better effect.
Choosing Process>Denoise>Non Local Means••• will pop-up dialog called Non Local
Means as shown below:
Strength: The denoising strength, the greater the value, the more removal the image
noise, but will lose more details;
Template Window: The template block size, used to calculate the weight, the
72
Process
recommended default value is 7;
Search Window: The template patch search window size, used to calculate the weighted
average value among image patches. Large value will increase the processing time. The
recommended default value is 21.
13.1 Sharpen
13.1.1 USM•••
UnSharp Masking (USM) is an image sharpening technique, often available in digital
image processing software. The "unsharp" of the name derives from the fact that the
technique uses a blurred, or "unsharp", positive image to create a mask of the original
image. The unsharped mask is then combined with the negative image, creating an
image that is less blurry than the original one.
Open an image and then choose Process>Sharpen>USM••• command, a dialog will pop
up as below.
Radius: Affects the size of the edges to be enhanced, so a smaller radius enhances
smaller-scale detail. Higher Radius values can cause halos at the edges. As a result, fine
detail needs a smaller Radius. In addition, Radius and Amount interact; reducing one
allows more of the other.
Threshold: Controls the minimum brightness change that will be sharpened. This
parameter is important to prevent smooth areas from becoming speckled. The threshold
setting can be used to sharpen more-pronounced edges, while leaving subtler edges
untouched. Low values should sharpen more because fewer areas are excluded. Higher
threshold values exclude areas of lower contrast.
Amount: is listed as a percentage, and controls the magnitude of each overshoot (how
much darker and how much lighter the edge borders become). This can also be thought
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of as how much contrast is added at the edges. It does not affect the width of the edge
rims.
a) Original image; b) Sharpened image
13.1.2 Laplacian Sharpen
The Laplacian operator is an example of a second derivative method of enhancement. It
is particularly good at finding the fine detail in an image. Any feature with a sharp
discontinuity (like noise, unfortunately) will be enhanced by a Laplacian operator. Thus,
one application of a Laplacian operator is to restore fine detail to an image which has
been smoothed to remove noise.
Open an image and then choose Process>Sharpen>Laplacian Sharpen, no parameter is
required for this method.
a) Original image; b) Sharpened image
13.1 Color Toning
13.1.1 Gamma•••
The Process>Color Toning>Gamma••• measures the brightness of midtone values
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Process
produced by a device (often a monitor). A higher gamma value yields an overall darker
image.
Preview: Check this button to display the real-time effects when one changes the slider
bar’s position. Default is checked;
Gamma: Dragging the slider bar to the left decreases the level, while moving it to the
right increases the level. Values can range from 0 to 3.0. Default is 1.0.
13.1.2 Histogram Equalization•••
Shift+Q
Adaptive histogram equalization (AHE) is a computer image processing technique used
to improve contrast in images. It differs from ordinary histogram equalization (HE) in
the respect that the adaptive method computes several histograms, each corresponding
to a distinct section of the image, and uses them to redistribute the lightness values of
the image. It is therefore suitable for improving the local contrast. However, AHE has a
tendency to over amplify noise in relatively homogeneous regions of an image. A variant
of adaptive histogram equalization called contrast limited adaptive histogram
equalization (CLAHE) prevents this by limiting the amplification.
Please
open
an
image
and
then
choose
Process>Color
Toning
>Histogram
Equalization•••, a dialog should pop up as follows.
Strength: The Strength will affect the enhancement effect. The larger the value, the
more obvious the effect.
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a) Original image; b) Enhanced image
13.1.3 LCC•••
The Local Color Correction algorithm is computed in two steps:
A mask image is computed from the input image.
The mask image is computed from the intensity component of the color image, defined
as the average of R, G and B values i.e. I=(R+G+B)/3. The use of intensity information
avoids distortions of the chroma. The mask image is obtained by inverting and then
blurring the intensity component of the input image.
The input and mask images are combined to get the result.
The combination operation consists of a power function, where the exponent is
computed using the mask value previously found. If the mask value is greater than 128,
it will result in an exponent less than 1, while if the mask value is lower than 128, it will
result in an exponent greater than 1. Moreover, if the mask value is precisely 128, the
exponent will be 1, and it will have no effect on the input image. The operation is
equivalent to a pixel-wise gamma correction.
Please open an image and then choose Process>Color Toning >LCC•••, a dialog should
pop up as follows.
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Process
Strength:The strength will affect the enhancement effect. The larger the value, the
more obvious the effect. Range:1~100, default is 50.
a) Original image; b) Enhanced image
13.1.4 AMSR
There are limited dynamic range problems when real world scenes are captured from a
digital camera and displayed on monitors. Tone mapping algorithms are applied to
image processing to reduce the dynamic range of an image to be displayed on low
dynamic range devices. Multi-scale Retinex is one of the most popular methods for
dynamic range compression, color constancy and color rendition. Here, we improve its
performance by adopting the adaptive weight functions, named Adaptive Multi-scale
Retinex (AMSR).
Please open an image and then choose Process>Color Toning>AMSR, the a) Original
image; b) Enhanced image
a)
Original image; b) Enhanced image
13.2 Deinterlace
Deinterlacing is the process of converting interlaced image or video, such as interlace
sensor into a non-interlaced form.
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Process
13.3 Filter•••
Shift+I
Choose the Process>Filter••• command to apply one of EXPLORE-Capture's numerous
filters on the active image. If you are not familiar with the process and effects of filtering,
some discussions about spatial filtering should be reviewed. EXPLORE-Capture provides
an extensive set of convolution and no convolution (morphological) filters. You can also
create custom filter kernels and apply them with the Filter commands.
Choosing the Process>Filter••• command will open the Filter dialog. Each group of
filters has its own property page or tab, where the Filter type and size can be selected.
The filtered results are almost always written to the active image. The Edit>Undo
command can be used to remove Filter operations that have been applied.
13.3.1 Image Enhance
Low Pass: Check this filter to soften an image by eliminating high-frequency information
(this has the effect of blurring sharp edges). The Low Pass filter replaces the center pixel
with the mean value in its neighborhood. The Low Pass filter can also be used to remove
noise.
High Pass: Check this filter to enhance high-frequency information. The High Pass filter
replaces the center pixel with a convolved value that significantly increases its contrast
from its neighbors. The High Pass filter leaves only elements of high contrast.
Gauss: Check this filter to soften an image by eliminating high-frequency information
using a Gauss function. This has the effect of blurring sharp edges. The operation of the
Gauss filter is similar to the Low Pass filter, but it degrades the image less than the Low
Pass filter.
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Process
High Gauss: Check this filter to enhance fine details. This operation is similar to the
unsharp masking technique (see the Sharpen filter), but it introduces less noise into the
image. It uses a Gaussian curve type of kernel. Available in 7x7 and 9x9 kernel sizes.
Equaliza-tion: This filter is used to enhance the contrast based on the histogram of the
local neighborhood (See Option below).
Sharpness: Check this filter to enhance fine details, or refocus an image that is blurred.
The sharpen filter sharpens the image using the unsharp masking technique.
Median: Check this filter to remove impulse noise from an image. The Median filter
replaces the center pixel with the Median value in its neighborhood. It will also blur the
image.
Rank: Check this filter to remove impulse noise from an image. The pixels in the kernel
are ranked by order of intensity, and the pixel in that range at the rank percentage is
chosen for comparison. For example, in a 5x5 kernel, there are 25 pixels. A rank
percentage of 95% would choose second-brightest pixel for comparison. If the
difference between the selected pixel and the center pixel is greater than the threshold
value, the Rank filter replaces the value of the center pixel with the value of the selected
pixel.
Option :1. If one of the Enhancement filters is checked, the following options will be
displayed:
3 x 3: Check 3 x 3 kernel will produce a more subtle filtering effect.
5 x 5: Check 5 x 5 kernel will produce a moderate filtering effect.
7 x 7: Check 7 x 7 kernel will produces a more extreme filtering effect.
Passes: Set the filter applied times on the image. When a filter is applied multiple
times, its effect is amplified by each pass. An image that has been softened by one
pass of the Low Pass filter will be softened further by a second pass.
Strength: Enter an applied value from 1-10 that reflects how much of the filtering
effect on the image.
A value of 10 specifies the full strength (100%) of the filtered result applied to each
pixel. Values less than 10 cut the full weight of the filter.
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Process
A value of 1 indicates that only 10% of the difference between the filtered pixel
value and the original pixel value should be applied, a value of 2 indicates that 20%
of the difference should be applied, and so forth.
Rank: This value specifies which pixel in the sorted array will be used to replace the
center pixel. Pixels in the array will be sorted in ascending order. The pixels are
indexed from 0 to Kernel Size x Kernel Size-1. In the pixel index 0 corresponds to
the lowest pixel value.
The Rank will be specified in terms of a percentage of the indexes (Kernel Size x
Kernel Size-1). A 50% Rank means the middle of the array. 0% rank means the
lowest index (lowest gray value), and 100% rank means the highest index (highest
gray value).
Option: 2. If the Equalization filter is checked, the options will relate to the histogram
equalization. Local Histogram Equalization modifies the contrast of an image based on
the pixel values in a small window surrounding each pixel.
Window: Image pixels statistics (min, max, histogram, mean, standard deviation,
etc.) will be calculated on a small Window of the image. These measurements are
then used to derive the local contrast for that area of the image. In short, an area of
Window x Window around each pixel is all that is considered when modifying the
intensities in the image. Larger Window produces smoother results, while small
Window track small details more closely.
Best Fit: Choose the Best Fit button to optimize the values for the particular image.
The results are achieved by stretching the local histogram to maximize the contrast
between the brightest and darkest pixels in the local window region.
Linear: This option distributes the histogram linearly across the intensity scale. This
function produces a high contrast image with the highest possible dynamic range.
Logarithmic: This option concentrates the histogram at the low end of the scale. This
function produces a high contrast image with little dynamic image. It will tend to
darken the image overall. It is useful for increasing the contrast in a very light
image.
Exponen-tial: This option concentrates the histogram at the high end of the scale.
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Process
This function produces a high contrast image with little dynamic image. It will tend
to lighten the image overall. It is useful for increasing the contrast in a very dark
image.
13.3.2 Edge Enhance
Sobel : Check this filter to enhance just the principal edges in an image. The Sobel
applies a mathematical formula to a 3x3 neighborhood to locate and highlight its edges.
Roberts: Check this filter to enhance fine edges in an image. The Roberts filter is not a
convolution filter. It applies a mathematical formula upon a 4 x 4 neighborhood to
produce its effect. The upper left pixel in the neighborhood is the one that is replaced.
Sculpt: Check this filter to apply a sculpted effect on the image.
Horizontal: Check this filter to detect and emphasize horizontal edges.
Vertical: Check this filter to detect and emphasize vertical edges.
Options : 1. If one of the Edge filters has been checked, the options will relate to kernel
size and filtering strength. The following options will be displayed:
3 x 3: Check 3x3 kernels to produce a more subtle filtering effect.
5 x 5: Check 5x5 kernels to produce a moderate filtering effect.
7 x 7: Check 7x7 kernels to produce a more extreme filtering effect.
Passes: Enter the number of times that the filter will be applied to the image. When
a filter is applied multiple times, its effect is amplified by each pass. An image that
has been softened by one pass of the Image Enhancement Filter, will be softened
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Process
further by a second pass.
Strength: Enter a value from 1-10 that reflects how much of the filtering effect to
apply to the image. A value of 10 specifies that the full strength (100%) of the
filtered result will be applied to each pixel. Values less than 10 cut the full weight of
the filter - a value of 1 indicates that only 10% of the difference between the filtered
pixel value and the original pixel value should be applied, a value of 2 indicates that
20% of the difference should be applied, and so forth.
Option 2. If Sobel or Roberts is checked, no options are available.
13.3.3 Morphological
Erode: Check this morphological filter if one wants to modify the size of objects in the
image. The Erode filter erodes the edges of bright objects and enlarges the edges of
dark ones.
Dilate: Check this morphological filter if one wants to modify the size of objects in the
image. The Dilation filter dilates bright objects and erodes dark ones.
Open: Check this morphological filter if one wants to modify the shape of objects in the
image. Assuming the image contains bright objects on a dark field, the Open filter will
smooth object contours, separate narrowly connected objects, and remove small dark
holes.
Close: Check this morphological filter if one wants to modify the shape of the objects in
the image. Assuming the image contains bright objects on a dark field; the Close filter
will fill gaps and enlarge protrusions to connect objects that are close together.
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Process
Tophat: Check this filter to detect and emphasize points, or grains, that are brighter
than the background. There are 3 kernel sizes for this processing. Click the radio button
to change the kernel size to the value that most closely matches the size of the grains to
detect.
Well: Check this filter to detect and emphasize points, or grains, that are darker than the
background. There are 3 kernel sizes for this processing. Click the radio button to
change the kernel size to the value that most closely matches the size of the grains to
detect.
Gradient: Check this filter to enhance edges in an image.
Watershed: Check this filter to separate objects that are touching. The Watershed filter
erodes objects until they disappear, then dilates them again, but will not allow them to
touch. The Watershed filter will not operate upon True Color images. If one wants to
separate objects in a True Color image, he must first convert it to Gray Scale (see
Process Frame: Image>Gray Scale).
Thinning: Check this filter to reduce an image to its skeleton. When choosing this filter,
one must set the threshold that determines whether a pixel is part of the subject or part
of the background (see Options below). The Thinning filter will not operate upon True
Color images. If one wants to thin a True Color image, he must first convert it to Gray
Scale.
Distance: The distance filter is used to show the distances of pixels within blobs to the
outer boundaries of those blobs. After applying the distance filter, the background will be
black (i.e. pixels with value 0). Only the area within the blobs will have non-zero values
(will be white). The values of each pixel within the blob will be a count of the shortest
distance from that pixel to the edge of the blob. Thus, all pixels along the blob's border
will have a value of 1 (since they are one pixel away from the edge of the blob); pixels
that are a distance of 2 from the border will have the value 2, and so on. This creates a
distance map of the image. The Distance filter will not operate upon True Color images.
If one wants to use the Distance filter with a True Color image, he must first convert it
to Gray Scale.
Options 1. If Erode, Dilate, Open, or Close filters is checked, the options will relate to the
kernel size and shape. The following options will be presented:
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Process
2 x 2 Square: Check to use the 2x2 square kernel configurations.
3 x 1 Row : Check to use the 3x1 row kernel configuration.
1 x 3 Column : Check to use the 1x3 column kernel configuration.
3 x 3 Cross : Check to use the 3x3 cross kernel configuration.
5 x 5 Circle : Check to use the 5x5 circular kernel configurations.
7 x 7 Circle : Check to use the 7x7 circular kernel configurations. This is a two-pass
filter, accomplished using a 5 x 5 circle followed by a 3x3 cross.
11 x 11 Circle : Check to use the 11 x 11 circular kernel configurations. This is a
three-pass filter, accomplished using a 5 x 5 circle followed by another 5 x 5 circle,
followed by a 3 x 3 cross.
Passes: Set the number of times iterate the filter.
Note: The circular kernels are especially effective on round objects (cells, grains and so
on) because their circular configuration preserves the circular shape of the objects
better than square configurations.
Option 2. If the Tophat, Well, or Gradient filter is selected, the options will relate to
kernel size and shape. The following options will be presented:
3 x 3: Check to use the 3x3 square kernel configurations.
5 x 5: Check to use the 5x5 square kernel configurations.
7 x 7: Check to use the 7x7 square kernel configurations.
Option 3. If Watershed, Thinning, or Distance filter is checked, the options will relate to
the threshold. The following option will be presented:
Threshold: Enter a percentage value from 1-100 that specifies the intensity value to
binarize the image. For example, a Threshold of 50% on a Gray Scale image would
set all values ≤127 to 0 (black) and all values ≥128 to the maximum value for that
image class (white).
13.3.4 Kernel
The Kernel page allows edit the kernel files for the morphological and convolution filters.
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Process
Note: The HiPass, LowPass, Laplacian and Unsharp kernel files are used by the HiPass,
LowPass, Laplacian, and Sharpen options listed in the Image Enhancement Filters page
dialog window (i.e. there is no difference between selecting one of these kernel files and
selecting its Option button in the Filter window -- the 2 methods ultimately do the same
thing). Because these kernel files are essential to the operation of these filtering options,
they must not be deleted or renamed.
Filter type: Check to modify the kernel for a selected Filter type, either Convolution or
Morphological filters.
Edit•••: Invoke the Edit Kernel dialog to modify the selected filter kernel.
Name•••: This combobox contains the name of the selected kernel file. If one wants
to save the modified kernel file to the same file, leave it as it is. If one wants to save
the file to a new location, enter the new filename here.
Kernel Size: Click the spin buttons or enter the number to change the size of the
kernel. Either direction may take into account one to nine pixels. As one modifies the
Kernel Size, the shape of the kernel representation changes accordingly. In the
center of the dialog, there are white boxes containing coefficients that will be
multiplied with each pixel that will be taken into account by the filter kernel. One can
change any coefficient by clicking on it and adjust it as desired.
Fill: Click this button to fill every element of the kernel with a particular value. The
Fill kernel dialog appears. One may enter a value between 0 and 10. Using the Fill
button is useful for setting all coefficients to the same value. One may then change
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the coefficients that require a different value.
Offset: The pixel whose value is being modified is usually the center-most pixel. One
may, however, designate any pixel. EXPLORE-Capture signals the pixel to be
changed by putting a box around it. Choose the X and Y Offset spin buttons to apply
New•••: Click to create a new filter kernel. The Edit Kernel dialog will appear. The
functions of the dialog are the same way as the dialog for Edit••• described above), with
the exception that the file name for the new kernel file must be provided.
Delete: Click to delete the selected filter kernel file.
Options: The choices in this group box will vary depending upon the kind of selected
filter.
13.4 Image Stacking•••
The image-stacking method is a form of speckle imaging commonly used for obtaining
high quality images from a number of short exposures with varying image shifts. It has
been used in astronomy for several decades, and is the basis for the image stabilization
feature on some cameras. The method involves calculation of the differential shifts of
the images. This is easily accomplished in astronomical images since they can be aligned
with the stars. Once the images have aligned, they are averaged together. It is a basic
principle of statistics that variation in a sample can be reduced by averaging together
the individual values. In fact, when using an average, the signal-to-noise ratio should be
increased by a factor of the square root of the number of images.
Image stacking can also be used for biological microscope image and florescent
microscope image to increase the image SNR and dynamical ranges; this is why we
introduce image stacking into EXPLORE-Capture.
EXPLORE-Capture Image Stacking introduced advanced image matching techniques for
rotated, shifted and scaled images. The user can record a short video to get a high
quality stacked image at ease without considering the image rotation, shifting and
scaling between a series of images in the video. The steps of Image Stacking are
described as below:
1. Choose Processing>Image Stacking••• menu, a Windows Open dialog will pop up
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Process
as shown below;
2. Choose the right video file recorded before in the Open dialog, here we can open
“test.avi” for demonstration, click Open to open the avi file;
3. Then an Image Stacking dialog will pop up to show the progress of the each image’s
stacking progress.
4. If Cancel is pressed, the Image Stacking will be canceled. After the stacking is
finished, a stacked image will be displayed in a new window for further application.
The final image is shown as below. One can find the stacked image signal to noise
ratio is greatly improved. From the stacked image has some black edges, this is
because the images in the video is moved and in the stacking process,
EXPLORE-Capture will added 0 to the image area that has no corresponding pixel in
the reference image (we choose the first image in the video file as the reference
image).
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Process
Note: a. EXPLORE-Capture support wmv,asf,avi,mp4,m4v,3gp,3g2,3gp2,3gpp,
mov,mkv,flv,rm,rmvb for Image Stacking operation; b) In the Image Stacking process,
EXPLORE-Capture takes the first frame as the reference image, this means the first
frame is very important and should be assure the first frame to be the right image scene
and the subsequent frames have a greater overlap region with the first frame.
13.1 Range•••
Shift+R
The Process>Range••• command allows set the intensity levels of the image to increase
the contrast and enhance the display in low-light situations. Choose the Range
command to open the Range dialog.
Two vertical markers show the upper and lower limits of the intensity levels. These
markers can be moved with mouse through the drag and drop method. For a color image,
the histogram will reflect the red, green, and blue values with corresponding colors
lines.
Two Edit controls indicate the values of the intensity levels. Choose the spin buttons to
increase or decrease these values. All values between 0 and the lower limit will be black
and all values between the upper limit and the upper end of the scale will be white.
These two edit control values corresponding to the two vertical markers show the upper
and lower limits of the intensity levels. Defaults are o and 255 respectively.
Reset: The Reset button allows Reset the black and white levels to the high and low ends
of the dynamic Range.
Best Fit: The Best Fit button automatically sets the intensity levels to the Best Fit. Best
Fit instructs EXPLORE-Capture to optimize the brightness and contrast values for the
particular image.
Invert: The Invert button reverses the color of the image.
Update: Update will refresh the display Range with the most current image information.
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Process
13.1 Binary•••
Shift+B
Binary is a kind of gray level process. If the gray of the pixel is greater than the given
threshold, the pixel's color will be changed into white. Otherwise, the pixel's color will be
changed into black. Although the process may lose some information, it is an important
step of other processes.
The curve on the Binary dialog shows the gray distribution of the image.
The Line in the dialog indicates the threshold value. Drag the line to change the
threshold, or change the value in the Line position edit box (in the top left corner of the
dialog) to move the Line.
The Line position edit box shows the current position value of the Line; Modify the value
will move the Line at the same time;
Click the "Best Fit" button to apply the auto threshold process to the image. It uses an
automatic threshold to make the image Binary.
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13.1 Pseudo Color•••
Note: Image must be in Gray Scale.
Choose the Pseudo Color command to "colorize" the active monochromatic image. This
is used to highlight certain features in a gray scale image such as display all densities
above a certain point in red, or, the imaging device recorded thermal information, all
temperatures below a certain point can be revealed in blue color.
When Pseudo Color a monochromatic image, a special palette need to be build with
which the monochromatic image is displayed. Pseudo Coloring an image does not
modify the pixels' values in image bitmap (it does not convert image to true color or
palette). It simply associates a Pseudo Color palette with the image that interprets the
gray-level values in the image as color.
Pseudo Colored images are very similar in structure to palette class images, but they
differ in a couple of important ways. First, the pixels' values in a Pseudo Colored image
actually represent continuous-tone intensity information, whereas a palette image's
pixels carry no intensity significance. Secondly, a palette image includes a palette table
that is actually part of the image file.
The colors used to map the gray values can be selected. The buttons at
each end of the color strips (
or
) will bring up the color
dialog separately, which allows select the start and end colors of the
range.
13.1 Surface Plot•••
The Process>Surface Plot••• (or 3-D Plot) tool creates a 3-D representation of the
intensity of an image. When choosing the Surface Plot command, keep in mind that
X=image width and Y=image height, and Z=pixel gray value.
In the viewpoint window, the elevation and rotation of the image can be adjusted by
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Process
dragging the mouse on the image.
Position Solid: The left edit control indicates the relative position of the entire image in
the viewpoint window, whose default value is 0.5. The right edit control indicates the
relative height of the display of the Z scale, whose default value is 1.
Reset: Set the Position Solid's two edit controls to their default values.
Image Background Color: Choose this command to display a color dialog where one can
adjust the background color of the viewpoint window.
Capture: Capture the active image in the viewpoint window as a new image.
Color Table: Select the colors to map the gray values found in the surface plot. The
button at each end of the Color Table brings up the color dialog, which allows select the
start and end colors of the range. (Please refer to Pseudo Color for more information)
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Options
14 Options
14.1 Preferences•••
There are 7 pages for the Preference dialog. They are Record, Batch Record, Auto
Capture, File, Grids, Video and Misc pages.
14.1.1 Record Page
The Record page can be used for the pre-setup of the Capture>Start Record command
operation with no need to further specify the file directory, file name and file format. All
those are specified in Options>Preferences•••>Record property page.
Directory: Enter the name of the drive and directory where the new image will be saved.
You may either type the path information, or use the Browse button
to locate it
from a standard Browse Folder dialog;
Name Format: The year, month, date, hour, minute and second or nnnn(sequence) can
be used as part of the file name. If more files are saved with in a second, a (xx) suffix is
attached to the end of Name Format to avoid the possible name confliction. For the
nnnn(sequence) Name Format, no suffix is needed;
File Prefix: Enter a file name prefix for Capture>Start Record or Capture>Batch Record
command when generating files names for video (Capture>Start Record) or a series of
video (Capture>Batch Record). This prefix will be combined with Name Format to form
a final file name naming paradigm;
File Type: In this combobox, select the format in which you want the image to be saved
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Options
(can be SER or AVI);
Sample: The final file name is shown at the right of the Sample label for reference;
Show the rename file dialog: The file name can be renamed according to whether or not
this item’s setup. When this item is checked, a Rename dialog will pop up after choosing
capture>Start Record command or click the
button on the toolbar. The new name
can be specified here again according to the requirement;
Limit>Time Limit(Secord(s)): The whole time for the record; the default is
60(1~3600s);
Limit>Frame Limit: The number of frames to be recorded; the default is 1000(1~
1000000);
When both of them are checked, the video record will be stopped after one of the limits
is reached.
14.1.2 Batch Record Page
The Batch Record page is used for the pre-setup of the Capture>Batch Record command.
Choosing the Options>Preferences•••>Batch Record property page will invoke a dialog
as shown below:
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Options
Number: The number of files to be recorded (2~10000, default is 10).
Time interval (Second(s): How long it will take to record the next video file (0~36000,
default is 10);
The other record parameter can be defined in Options>Preferences•••>Record property
page. Please check it for detail.
14.1.3 Auto Capture
The Auto Capture page is used for the setup for the Capture>Auto Capture command.
This can be done in Options>Preferences•••>Auto Capture property page:
Directory: Enter the name of the drive and directory where the new image will be saved.
You may either type the path information, or use the Browse button
to locate it
from a standard Browse Folder dialog;
Name Format: The year, month, date, hour, minute and second or nnnn(sequence) are
used as part of the file name. If more files are saved with in a second, a (xx) suffix is
attached to the end of Name Format to avoid the possible name confliction. For the
nnnn(sequence) Name Format, no suffix is needed.
File Prefix: Enter a file name prefix for Auto Capture when generating files names for a
series of images. This prefix will be combined with Name Format to form a final file name
according to the naming paradigm.
File Type: In this combobox, select the format in which you want the image to be saved
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Options
(can be BMP, JPG, PNG, TIF, FIT);
Sample: The final file name is shown at the right of the Sample label for reference;
Capture every frame: Check this item will capture every frame in the video sequence;
Time slot(second): Capture an image according to the time interval to (0-100S, default
is 6);
Total Images: Checking Total Images will enable its edit box. You can enter the Total
Images (1-9999) to be captured. EXPLORE-Capture will stop the Auto Capture process
automatically when the Total Images are reached;
If Total Images is unchecked, EXPLORE-Capture will capture the images continuously
until user choose the Capture>Stop Capture command again to stop the Auto Capture
process.
After the Auto Capture is started, the Capture>Auto Capture menu will be changed to
the Capture>Stop Capture) menu. Choosing this command will stop the Auto Capture
process.
There are a variety of image format available (they are bmp, jpg, png, tif or fit) to save
the captured image. For example, when choosing jpg format, the save options can be
set in Options>Preferences•••>File property page. If the format has options, the
Config••• button will be enable.
Clicking the Config••• button will pop up a dialog as bellow. Different format has
different options.
95
Options
After all the parameters are set. Click OK will close the dialog and the parameters can be
used for the Auto Capture command with no further setup.
See Options>Preference•••>File page for details.
14.1.4 File Page
One can check a file Extension for the specified file Format and its Abbr.(abbreviation),
to determine whether or not it will be displayed in the Browse window or not (The
checked Format can be displayed in the Browse window).
96
Options
Extension: Used to identify the file extension;
Format: English full name of file formats;
Abbr.: File Format’s abbreviation;
Browse: Check/uncheck to determine whether or not the file format can be displayed in
the Browse window;
Config…: To configure the image file Save As Option for JPEG, Portable Network Graphics,
Tag Image File Format, CompuServ, JPEG 2000 Standard, JPEG Codestream, GIF. For
details, please refer to the Option button explanation in the File>Save As in Sec.6.4.
14.1.5 Grids Page
Choosing
the
View>Grid>Setting•••
command,
or
choosing
the
Options>
Preference>••• command and clicking the Grids page to realize the same function.
Choosing the Preference>••• command and clicking the Grids page can set the Grid
Style, Line Style, and Line Color for the Grid overlaid on the video and image window can
also be set.
Grid Style: The Grid Style can be No Grid, Auto Grid or Manual Grid. Default is No Grid;
Grid Line Style: The Line Style for the grid can be Solid, Dash, Dot or DashDot et al.
Default is Solid;
Grid Line Color: The color of the grid line. Default is Red (255,0,0).
14.1.6 Video Page
97
Options
Choose the Options>Preference dialog and click Video to show the Video page. The
Video page is used to set Date Time and Clarity Factor to overlay on the video window.
The Position, Background, Font Size, Font Weight of the Date Time, and Clarity Factor
can be defined together. Their Colors can be defined separately.
Clicking the OK button and the Date Time, and Clarity Factor will be overlaid on the
Video window.
The Clarity Factor can tell if the sample is in good focused state or not. The larger the
Clarity Factor, the better the sample focused.
14.1.7 Misc Page
The Misc page is mainly used for the control of the EXPLORE-Capture UI. It mainly
includes:
1. Show the splash windows on the startup;
2. Prevent screensaver when video preview / capture
3.Units of temperature;
4. Sidebars;
5. UI Style;
6. Language;
7. Enable GPU accelerated image processing;
8. Privacy;
settings et al. They all are shown as below.
98
Options
99
Window
15 Window
15.1 Close All
Choosing the Closes All command to close all of the pictures opened or captured inside
EXPLORE-Capture frame. If you have made any modifications to the pictures or if you
have captured some pictures from the camera, choosing the Close All will let you finish
the saving operations quickly.
If the above image windows exist, choosing the Window>Close All command will bring
up a Save Files dialog as below:
1. Clicking Yes on the Save Files dialog will close the Video , Browse, Image windows
directly that are not changed without ask anything. If there are newly created Image
window, EXPLORE-Capture will bring up a Save As dialog to prompt user to enter the File
name to save file.
100
Window
If Save or Cancel is clicked in the Save As dialog, EXPLORE-Capture will return to the
Save Files dialog to continue the next file close operation;
2. Clicking No on Save Files dialog will close the current image window without saving
operation and return to the Save Files dialog to continue the next file operation;
3. Clicking Cancel will cancel the Save Files dialog without doing anything;
4. Clicking Yes to All on Save Files dialog will always bring up a Save As dialog to let you
enter the File name to save files one by one until all of the files are saved;
5. Clicking No to All on Save Files dialog will close all of the image windows without
saving them;
6. Clicking Batch Save on Save Files dialog will transfer the save process to File>Batch
Save••• command. Please check the File>Batch Save••• menu for details;
Note: If you have a lot of pictures opened and have made some modifications on them
and want to close them quickly without saving anything, you may uses this command
and choose Step 5. All the images will be closed instantly, no warning will be given.
15.2 Reset Window Layout
Choosing Window>Reset Window Layout will reset the EXPLORE-Capture window layout
to the original one. The reset will be effective after restart.
15.3 Windows•••
Choosing the Window>Windows••• will open a dialog box that lets you manage the
currently opened windows.
The dialog allows you to manage large lists of open windows by assigning them into
groups. Let us say you have 10 windows opened, but want to close 4 of them scattered
through the list.
101
Window
1. Choose the Window>Windows••• command;
2. Select the windows you want to close. Hold Ctrl or Shift key to select more than one
at a time. Here, 4 items are selected;
3. Click Close Window(s) button, those 4 selected windows will be closed, leaving the
other files or captures available for editing;
4. User can use this command to switch to the checked window on a list by hitting
Activate (or "bring up" from an icon multiple windows).
102
Help
16 Help
16.1 Help Contents
F1
Choose the Help>Help Contents command to load EXPLORE-Capture help file. The help
file is in Portable Document Format (PDF).
PDF is a file format used to represent documents in a manner independent of application
software, hardware, and operating systems. Each PDF file encapsulates a complete
description of a fixed-layout flat document, including the text, fonts, graphics, and other
information needed to display it. In 1991, Adobe Systems co-founder John Warnock
outlined a system called "Camelot" that evolved into PDF.
While the PDF specification has been available free of charge since at least 2001, PDF
was originally a proprietary format controlled by Adobe. It was officially released as an
open standard on July 1, 2008, and published by the International Organization for
Standardization as ISO 32000-1:2008. In 2008, Adobe published a Public Patent
License to ISO 32000-1 granting royalty-free rights for all patents owned by Adobe that
are necessary to make, use, sell and distribute PDF compliant implementations.
If your computer still does not install the PDF reader, please try to download it from:
http://www.adobe.com/downloads/
16.2 About•••
Display the related information about EXPLORE-Capture, including EXPLORE-Capture
version, Compatible, Built date and its developer’s www etc.
Clicking on the URL link will direct you to the address of the application supplier. If you
have any problem with the camera or application, please feel free to contact your
supplier.
103

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