Publication Date:
2014-09-09
Description:
An experiment was performed in an attempt to evaluate autocorrelation as an indicator of texture using five small patches representing varying distances on each of four lunar photos. Each patch was scanned at 50 micron increments on a 64-level gray scale. Several problems were involved in using the ordinary autocorrelation value but a rougher autocorrelation measure, the percentage of neighboring pairs (at a given lag distance) which fell within one graylevel of one another, yielded very encouraging results. As the distance to the feature decreased, initial slope of the graph of percentage against lag increased, and the general level of the graph decreased. When a crestline was present, the graph tended to continue to decrease at higher lags as well, rather than leveling off after the initial steep slope.
Keywords:
INSTRUMENTATION AND PHOTOGRAPHY
Type:
Auburn Univ. The NASA-ASEE Summer Fac. Fellowship Program; p 461-474
Format:
text
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