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September 26, 1997 - Image 115

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1997-09-26

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.



lit

q3eAt athhek for a
hap p_y, healthg
Wein Wear.

withet kr a

, appg, healthg

All Our
Ge&-zires and (1r/ends;
Our wish fir a- pear
filed )/ath happiness,
kh andprapenp
IN PRODUCTS, INC.

(Zew Wear.

RUTH WAXER

RUTH & MARVIN WAIN

wahet 454r a happirj,

f-if 11911hP.1 tor a
M happg,
health!'

F 4.

%to Wear.

its third annual scholarship
/1 ceremony in Jerusalem.
Scholarships were awarded for
the 1996/97 academic year to
/T)11 outstanding Ethiopian
graduate students from all
over Israel and, for the first
time, to ten over-30 parents
studying for the bachelor's
7 degree. Rachel Issachar was
I one of the recipients.

ROB, JODI, DAVID
& SARA WEINFELD

healthg %fist Wear.
CLASSIC PHOTOGRAPHY
MURRAY GOLDENBERG -
MARC COHEN

THE BALKIN FAMILY - MICHAEL, DEBBIE,
ELANA & AARON

— WZPS

3-D Glasses
From Institute

> The trouble with robots and
other automated systems
equipped with artificial
vision is that their eyes "see"
• the world as two-dimension-
/ --)al. As a result, they have great
difficulty in assessing the rel-
ative positions of objects.
Existing ways for robots to
reconstruct 3-D images tend
to be slow and cumbersome,
/- but two Weizmann Institute
physicists have developed a
3-D imaging technique that
greatly speeds up and simpli-
/—fies this process.
The system — developed
by Drs. Daniel Zajman and
Oded Heber of the Particle
( FPhysics Department — uses
two regular video camera, ,a
light source and a transparent
fluorescent screen placed
between the cameras and the
object to be filmed. When
Plight is reflected off the
object, it strikes the screen
and creates a flash that the
cameras record along with
--)] the image of the object. One
- camera films continuously,
while the other has a shutter
that opens for only a bil-
lionth of a second at a time,
• r egistering just a minute frac-
tion of the light particles
emitted by the flashes.
Because both the speed of
light and the time it takes for
the flashes to fade on the
screen are known, it is possi-
ble to determine the exact
distance between the screen
and each point on the
object's
. surface. This infor-
i turn, is combined
mation, in
with data from the 2-D pic-

INSTITUTE on page R18

CINDY AND CAL MOSS
CAL MOSS & SON PLUMBING

-

T",iqr.C.M1.11111'

Vo All c/(1),
aehtires and cin'enair,
)47ishfe a - pear
path happiness,
and praperitp

a

BRINA, KEN, LAURA, JORDON,
CLAYTON & ETHAN MOSS
CAL MOSS & SON PLUMBING

SUNSHINE TREATS
PAM & MARILYN

vp. kvo

< •

sv

CLAIRE & BARRY KAHN
& THE STAFF AT BARRY K. SALON

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