the bandwidth of the Internet increases and interface
technology becomes easily accessible. Our project,
Micro Archiving, aims at developing a technology to
archive Micro-Presence in highquality. For research
use, it is an effective way to make highfidelity vir-
tual specimens that allow scholars to share academic
resources over the Internet. For commercial use, the
virtual models captured by our technology can be ap-
plied to computer graphics, games, digital cinemas
and other entertainment media. The technical goal
of this project was to build a new device for archiv-
ing small physical objects in digital form on these ad-
vancing future platform for helping researchers con-
duct research. The proposed imaging device needed
to have specific features for this use and we designed
the system to satisfy this goal. Our technique can scan
3-dimensional structure, all-focused color image, dif-
fusion and transmission coefficients of a target object.
A small object often has very fine and minute
structures that require a sophisticated optical device
such as a microscope to be observed. For generating
an all-focused image, where all the picture elements
are focused, a con-focal microscope is one effective
choice to scan a target object in high-resolution and
high quality. However, it has a deficiency in that it
cannot capture color information. Traditionally, for
creating archives of small physical objects from ar-
chaeological sites,microscopic cameras and other 2-
dimensional optical apparatus have been used. This
kind of an image resource is a historical asset that
provides cultural and scientific explanation on what
our ancestors’ life and technologies of those days
were like. These replicable resources are one of the
most important elements in conducting an archaeo-
logical research. However, the imaging technique
is accompanied by loss of information that derives
from transformation of 3-dimensional structure to the
2-dimensional medium. To solve this problem, 3-
dimensional scanning technologies have been attract-
ing attention in the research field. A 3-dimensional
scanner is a device that can capture 3-dimensional
structure of the target object often with color infor-
mation.
There are varieties of 3-dimensional scanners for
different uses. lazer-scanning technique is probably
the most popular technique and there are a number of
commercial products based on this technique. There
is another technique that utilizes an active lighting.
By projecting a certain pattern on a target object and
recognizing the projected pattern, this technique an-
alyzes the 3-dimensional surface shape of the target
object. In these two methods, color-information are
captured in a separate process often with a differ-
ent imaging device. In Stereo camera method, cor-
responding two points in two images taken by a set
of camera arranged in parallel are extracted to recon-
struct 3-dimensional surface structure of a target ob-
ject. This method is effective in scanning a large-scale
object such as an architectural structure and a land-
scape(Levoy, 2000). However, they have deficiency
in that they cannot deal with an extremely small ob-
ject less than 5 cm.
2 SYSTEM DESIGN
Our Micro Archiving technology can comprehen-
sively handle high-resolution all-focused imaging, 3-
dimensional capturing and transparency capturing si-
multaneously. Constructing high-resolution 3D mod-
els is an expensive and time-consuming task. In often
cases, 3-dimensional scanners and other image-based
modeling methods are used to automate this process.
However, existing systems had a trouble in case of a
small object. This is the main issue that our newly
proposed method solves. As we design the system,
we examined required features and functions that sat-
isfy our goal of providing researchers with an ultimate
archiving system.
2.1 Depth Measurement
It was the primal objective that our system can cap-
ture 3-dimensional structure of a small object that ex-
isting technique cannot deal with. Small objects, es-
pecially in case of a natural object and small animals
such as mineral materials and insects, have complex
and minute structures of fine concavity and convexity.
Our system needed to capture these physical
features. Our methodology is based on an exist-
ing image-based model acquisition method called
”Shape-from-focus”(Nayer and Nakagawa, 1994). In
general, Shape-from-focus method is done in the fol-
lowing process. Firstly, a optical device, usually a
camera, is focused onto a part of the target object. By
slightly changing the focal length of the optical de-
vice, a sequence of images are taken each of these
images contains different region in focus as shown in
figure 2. In general, focusing depends on the distance
from the camera to the target object. Therefore, by
extracting focused pixels in each image, it is possi-
ble to measure the 3-dimensional surface shape of the
target object.
However, the drawback of this method is that it is
difficult to generalize the focus model. Especially in
case of a complex object, pixels that are out of focus
affect neighboring pixels and this effect is extremely
complex to analyze. In general, a pixel becomes the
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