Doctoral Degrees (Physics)
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/10413/6603
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Browsing Doctoral Degrees (Physics) by Author "Alport, Michael J."
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Item Computer-aided diagnosis in mammography : correlation of regions in multiple standard mammographic views of the same breast.(2006) Padayachee, Jayanethie.; Alport, Michael J.; Rae, William Ian Duncombe.Abstract available in PDF file.Item The influence of rotating and locked magnetic islands on edge transport in Tokoloshe tokamak.(1993) Van Vuuren, Gary Wayne.; Alport, Michael J.; Hellberg, Manfred Armin.The turbulence and fluctuation induced transport in the edge plasma of the Tokoloshe tokamak was studied using a Langmuir probe array. In this thesis three separate experiments are presented, each of which examines a particular aspect of the edge plasma. In the first experiment measurements of edge plasma parameters are presented. These include standard parameters (such as Ne, Op , Te, etc.) as well as features such as the velocity shear, T(t) during periods of both high and low Mirnov activity, Te/Te and Q. These are compared with results from other machines as well as predictions of several turbulence theories. It was found that many of the results are very similar to those obtained on other machines and that, since the operating parameter space on Tokoloshe is well within the parameter space described by drift wave theories, resistivity-driven gradient driven turbulence theories do not describe the edge turbulence. In the second experiment external windings are used to produce fields which can slow and lock magnetic islands in the toroidally rotating plasma. Edge parameters are again presented and these results compared with those from the so-called 'reference' plasmas, i.e. ones in which no locking occurred. During locking some parameters are dramatically altered, e.g.Te/Te Standard transport theory ignores the effect of Te/Te since they are usually small in reference discharges. During the locked phase, however, certain measurements used to deduce T and Q are greatly affected by increases in Te/Te. As a result, certain assumptions regarding these measurements are no longer valid. Comparison of results for different island positions (produced by different coils) indicates that the assumption of poloidal and toroidal symmetry of edge conditions is invalid. The third experiment investigates the high frequency (~60 kHz), low amplitude, magnetic oscillation which characterises the locked phase and which exhibits some small degree of correlation with the fluctuations observed on (e.g.) Of'. Since over 80% of the spectral power of Te/Te lies below 70 kHz and since Of /Te depends strongly on Te/Te , it is suggested that the magnetic mode and these large variations in Te, may be due to a similar physical process.Item Sugar crystal size characterization using digital image processing.(2007) Argaw, Getachew Abebe.; Alport, Michael J.; Malinga, Sandile B.The measurement of the crystal size distribution is a key prerequisite in optimising the growth of sugar crystals in crystalisation pans or for quality control of the final product. Traditionally, crystal size measurements are carried out by inspection or using mechanical sieves. Apart from being time consuming, these techniques can only provide limited quantitative information. For this reason, a more quantitative automatic system is required. In our project, software routines for the automated measurement of crystal size using classical image analysis techniques were developed. A digital imaging technique involves automatically analyzing a captured image of a representative sample of ~ 100 crystals for the automated measurement of crystal size has been developed. The main problem of crystals size measurements using image processing is the lack of an efficient algorithm to identify and separate overlapping and touching crystals which otherwise compromise the accuracy of size measurement. This problem of overlapping and touching crystals was addressed in two ways. First, 5 algorithms which identify and separate overlapping and touching crystals, using mathematical morphology as a tool, were evaluated. The accuracy of the algorithms depends on the technique used to mark every crystal in the image. Secondly, another algorithm which used convexity measures of the crystals based on area and perimeter, to identify and reject overlapping and touching crystals, have been developed. Finally, the two crystal sizing algorithms, the one applies ultimate erosion followed by a distance transformation and the second uses convexity measures to identify overlapping crystals, were compared with well established mechanical sieving technique. Using samples obtained from a sugar refinery, the parameters of interest, including mean aperture (MA) and coefficient of variance (CV), were calculated and compared with those obtained from the sieving method. The imaging technique is faster, more reliable than sieving and can be used to measure the full crystal size distributions of both massecuite and dry product.