Advances in Imaging and Electron Physics

Director of collection: Hawkes Peter W.

Language: English
Publication date:
288 p. · 15x22.8 cm · Hardback
Out of Print
Advances in Imaging and Electron Physics merges two long-running serials-Advances in Electronics and Electron Physics and Advances in Optical and Electron Microscopy. This series features extended articles on the physics of electron devices (especially semiconductor devices), particle optics at high and low energies, microlithography, image science and digital image processing, electromagnetic wave propagation, electron microscopy, and the computing methods used in all these domains. Publication of this 150th volume is an event to be celebrated and, to mark the occasion, the editor has brought together leaders of some of the main themes of past and hopefully of future volumes: electron microscopy, since Ladislaus Marton was one of the pioneers; mathematical morphology, which has often appeared in this series and also fills a supplement, so often cited that it usually appears just as ?Academic Press, 1994” (H.J.A.M. Heijmans, Morphological Image Operators, Supplement 25, 1994) with no mention of the Advances; ptychography, a highly original approach to the phase problem, the latter also the subject of a much cited Supplement (W.O. Saxton, ?Computer Techniques for Image Processing in Electron Microscopy?, Supplement 10, 1978); and wavelets, which have become a subject in their own right, not just a tool in image processing.
*I. Daubechies, G. Tesche and L. Vese, On some iterative concepts for image restoration
*R.F.W. Pease, Significant advances in scanning electron microscopy
1965-2007
*J. M. Rodenburg, Ptychography and related diffractive imaging methods
*J. Serra, Advances in mathematical morphology: segmentation
Physicists, electrical engineers and applied mathematicians in all branches of image processing and microscopy as well as electron physics in general
Peter Hawkes obtained his M.A. and Ph.D (and later, Sc.D.) from the University of Cambridge, where he subsequently held Fellowships of Peterhouse and of Churchill College. From 1959 – 1975, he worked in the electron microscope section of the Cavendish Laboratory in Cambridge, after which he joined the CNRS Laboratory of Electron Optics in Toulouse, of which he was Director in 1987. He was Founder-President of the European Microscopy Society and is a Fellow of the Microscopy and Optical Societies of America. He is a member of the editorial boards of several microscopy journals and serial editor of Advances in Electron Optics.
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