08-30-2021 10:36 AM
Hello Community!!!
If I have many images, suppose 1000 and I want to know the coordinates of the particle that is in the images. How can I do that??
08-30-2021 10:48 AM
In order to get help, you'll either need to be wayyyyy more descriptive than "the particle that is in the images" or we'll need to see an example image.
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08-30-2021 10:56 AM
If I have a video clip of a moving particle, and I break it in a series of images. Suppose there is 10 minute video captured at 20 fps, then I'll have 12000 frames. so I want to know the particle coordinates in all frames. and the angle between the particle axis of motion and the x-axis. Can I do this using pattern matching in Lab view. Attached is the kind of images I have.
08-30-2021 04:30 PM
That sounds like the sort of thing the NI Vision Development module is for. It's not free, so I hope you have a budget to get it, but you can get it as a free trial to see if it works first.
08-30-2021 06:57 PM
Analyzing 1000 or 12000 images is exactly the same as analyzing one image, it just takes longer. 😄
Do you have the code to analyze one image?
08-31-2021 03:39 AM
Well, you have a nice image, so that makes life a lot easier.
Which one is the particle?
A simple IMAQ Threshold and IMAQ object analysis or circle detection would detect both particles. A simple filter on the image or size on the results would give you the small or large particle.
You could use OpenCV with Python (called from LabVIEW) for this too.