Entropy of Shortest Distance (ESD) as Pore Detector and Pore-Shape Classifier

The entropy of shortest distance (ESD) between geographic elements (“elliptical intrusions”, “lineaments”, “points”) on a map, or between "vugs", "fractures" and "pores" in the macro- or microscopic images of triple porosity naturally fractured vuggy carbonates provides...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Klaudia Oleschko, Sergey Cherkasov, Gabor Korvin, Boris Sterligov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2013-06-01
Series:Entropy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/15/6/2384
Description
Summary:The entropy of shortest distance (ESD) between geographic elements (“elliptical intrusions”, “lineaments”, “points”) on a map, or between "vugs", "fractures" and "pores" in the macro- or microscopic images of triple porosity naturally fractured vuggy carbonates provides a powerful new tool for the digital processing, analysis, classification and space/time distribution prognostic of mineral resources as well as the void space in carbonates, and in other rocks. The procedure is applicable at all scales, from outcrop photos, FMI, UBI, USI (geophysical imaging techniques) to micrographs, as we shall illustrate through some examples. Out of the possible applications of the ESD concept, we discuss in details the sliding window entropy filtering for nonlinear pore boundary enhancement, and propose this procedure as unbiased thresholding technique.
ISSN:1099-4300