08-01-2008 04:10 PM
08-02-2008 12:37 AM
08-02-2008 07:47 AM - edited 08-02-2008 07:48 AM
AntLee29 a écrit:
I have a 16x256x256 3-dimensional array of intensity images which represent 16 different 256x256 intensity graphs. Each page of the stack represents a single wavelength on the visible spectrum. Is it possible to create a full 16-color picture by overlaying the intensity graphs together? If so, how would I go about doing that? I have attached the 3-d stack of data.

08-02-2008 09:57 AM
*He's the Graphing Wizard, there has to be trick,
He's the Graphing Wizard, he's got such a supple wrist
How do you think he does it? I don't know
What maeks him so good?
....
I pass my graphing crown to him, to him!
Ben
* To be read with the rock-opera "Tommy" by the Who playing in the background.

08-02-2008 02:57 PM
08-03-2008 01:49 AM - edited 08-03-2008 01:50 AM
08-03-2008 02:49 AM - edited 08-03-2008 02:55 AM
08-03-2008 02:58 AM - edited 08-03-2008 03:01 AM
08-03-2008 07:20 AM - edited 08-03-2008 07:20 AM
AntLee29 a écrit:
(...) Correct me if I'm wrong, but it looks like the equalizer lets you bias
the color table on each wavelength to make it stand out more. That means I should keep them all at the same level to get the normal distribution?
I've got the rest of the vis understood now.I suppose I'll need to manually figure out an RGB value for wavelengths under 380, as the first 2 pages in the stack correspond to 359nm and 378nm.
You're looking at endothelial cells in a fixed collagen matrix. We used a laser to image the sample and a prism to spread the fluorescence across a 16-channel photomultiplier tube, which was tuned to the wavelength range that we desired.

08-03-2008 08:25 AM - edited 08-03-2008 08:30 AM
