• Title/Summary/Keyword: IMACS

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Digital X-ray Imaging in Dentistry (치과에서 디지털 x-선 영상의 이용)

  • Kim Eun-Kyung
    • Journal of Korean Academy of Oral and Maxillofacial Radiology
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    • v.29 no.2
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    • pp.387-396
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    • 1999
  • In dentistry. RadioVisioGraphy was introduced as a first electronic dental x-ray imaging modality in 1989. Thereafter. many types of direct digital radiographic system have been produced in the last decade. They are based either on charge-coupled device(CCD) or on storage phosphor technology. In addition. new types of digital radiographic system using amorphous selenium. image intensifier etc. are under development. Advantages of digital radiographic system are elimination of chemical processing, reduction in radiation dose. image processing, computer storage. electronic transfer of images and so on. Image processing includes image enhancement. image reconstruction. digital subtraction, etc. Especially digital subtraction and reconstruction can be applied in many aspects of clinical practice and research. Electronic transfer of images enables filmless dental hospital and teleradiology/teledentistry system. Since the first image management and communications system(IMACS) for dentomaxillofacial radiology was reported in 1992. IMACS in dental hospital has been increasing. Meanwhile. researches about computer-assisted diagnosis, such as structural analysis of bone trabecular patterns of mandible. feature extraction, automated identification of normal landmarks on cephalometric radiograph and automated image analysis for caries or periodontitis. have been performed actively in the last decade. Further developments in digital radiographic imaging modalities. image transmission system. imaging processing and automated analysis software will change the traditional clinical dental practice in the 21st century.

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의료 영상 관리와 통신 시스템

  • 문성기;안승옥
    • 전기의세계
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    • v.38 no.8
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    • pp.41-52
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    • 1989
  • 본 논문에서는 의료 IMACS와 관련된 새로운 디지탈 입력 장치들, 데이타베이스 시스템과 저장매체, 여러 종류의 Workstation, 통신 시스템등 기술적인 면을 많이 다루려 한다. 그리고 영상의 질과 자료의 양, 망의, 성능 분석, 영상화 시스템들과 방사선 정보 시스템과 다른 주변 기기들과의 접속에 따른 IMACS의 효과를 논하려 한다. 또한 지난 87년부터 Gorgetown University Hospital(GUH)은 미육군 의무단의 6,5백만불의 지원으로 가장 광범위한 의료 IMACS설비를 AT & T사와 공동 연구하고 설치하여, IMACS의 기술적 평가를 계속하여 왔다. 이와같이 실행되어 있는 경험을 통하여, 의료 IMACS의 임상 운영 효과와 더 나아가서 새로운 효과들을 검토함으로써 앞으로 보강되어져야 할 점들을 연구하려 한다.

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X-ray AGNs in Abell 133

  • Shin, Jaejin;Woo, Jong-Hak;Gallo, Elena;Plotkin, Richard M.;Mulchaey, John S.
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.40 no.1
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    • pp.75.1-75.1
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    • 2015
  • Environments (field, galaxy groups, and galaxy clusters) can affect galaxy evolution due to galaxy interaction which is controlled by different galaxy number densities and velocity dispersions. Since the galaxy interaction or merger triggers both star formation and AGN, AGN fraction can be used to understand the effect of environment. We detected X-ray AGN fraction in a nearby galaxy cluster, Abell 133, using Chandra X-ray image and optical spectra. We found ~600 X-ray point sources in the field of Abell 133 using the 2.8 Msec exposure Chandra images. We determined 3 cluster members based on the redshifts derived from optical spectra obtained from Magellan IMACS observation. The AGN fraction in Abell 133 is similar to that of other environments, i.e., COSMOS and CDFS. We will discuss the results by comparing Abell 133 with other environments.

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KYDISC program: The Impact of Mergers on the Evolution of Galaxies

  • Oh, Sree
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.42 no.1
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    • pp.30.1-30.1
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    • 2017
  • In the hope to detect low-surface brightness features (${\mu}_{r^{\prime}}{\sim}27\;mag\;arcsec^{-2}$), we carried out KASI-Yonsei Deep Imaging Survey for Clusters (KYDISC) targeting 14 local clusters at 0.016 < z < 0.145 using Magellan/IMACS telescope and CFHT/MegaCam. Out of 1450 cluster galaxies, 18% of galaxies show the signatures of galaxy mergers. We explore merger-driven changes from various point-of-view. We first examine color-magnitude relations, and find that galaxies related to recent mergers are populated more on blue color than their counterparts. Besides, we find the extremely low frequency of mergers on low-mass red-sequence galaxies, suggesting a migration of red galaxies into the green-valley region through merger-driven star-formation. We also study the mass-size relation of our sample, finding a larger galaxy size in galaxies related to recent mergers. Our results suggest that mergers can simultaneously change properties of galaxies, making outliers on galactic scaling relations.

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IMS High-z Quasar Survey - Faint z~6 Quasar Candidates in IMS Fields

  • Kim, Yongjung;Im, Myungshin;Jeon, Yiseul
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.40 no.1
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    • pp.72.4-73
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    • 2015
  • Over the last decade, more than 50 quasars have been discovered at redshift about 6 when reionization of the universe occurred. However, most of them are luminous quasars (zAB < 21 mag), implying that such a biased quasar sample, which cannot represent the entire population of quasars at z~6, is not enough to understand the properties of quasars in the early universe. Recently, we have been performing the Infrared Medium-deep Survey (IMS), a moderately wide (120 deg2) and deep (JAB ~ 22.5 - 23 mag) near-infrared imaging survey. Combining this with the optical (ugriz) imaging data from the CFHT Legacy Survey (CFHTLS), we have identified more than 10 faint quasar candidates at z~6 in the IMS field by using multiple color selection criteria. From now on, we will perform spectroscopic confirmations of these faint quasar candidates with IMACS on the Magellan Baade Telescope at Las Campanas Observatory and GMOS on the Gemini South Telescope at Gemini Observatory. The confirmed quasars will be used to constrain the faint-end slope of the quasar luminosity function at z~6 and calculate the ratio of quasar ionizing flux to required flux for reionization of the universe. Moreover, these confirmed quasars will be followed up with near-infrared spectroscopy to determine their black hole masses and Eddington ratios to check the rapidness of their growth.

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Optical 3D Spectroscopic Survey on Gas Outflows in Type 2 AGNs

  • Bae, Hyun-Jin;Woo, Jong-Hak;Karouzos, Marios;Gallo, Elena;Shen, Yue;Flohic, Helene
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.40 no.1
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    • pp.74.2-74.2
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    • 2015
  • Strong outflows from active galactic nuclei (AGNs) may play a crucial role in galaxy evolution. Integral-field spectroscopy (IFS) is the most powerful tool to study the detailed kinematics of AGN outflows. We present the on-going optical 3D spectroscopic survey of ionized gas outflows. Type 2 AGN sample is uniquely selected from SDSS DR7 with a luminosity-limit (i.e., L[O III] > $10^{41.5}erg/s$) as well as strong kinematic signatures of ionized gas outflows ([O III] velocity shift > ~200 km/s or [O III] velocity dispersion (FWHM) > 1000 km/s), defining an extremely rare population (< ~0.5%). Thus, these AGNs with strong outflow signatures are one of the best suites for investigating AGN feedback. The IFS observations cover several kpc scales for the central region of the host galaxies, providing a detailed information of the kinematics and geometry of the gas outflows. In this contribution, we report the current status of the survey and the preliminary results on gas kinematics of 18 AGNs, based on the Magellan/IMACS-IFU and the VLT/VIMOS data.

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Spectroscopic Confirmation of Galaxy Clusters at z~0.92

  • Kim, Jae-Woo;Im, Myungshin;Lee, Seong-Kook;Hyun, Minhee
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.40 no.1
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    • pp.45.1-45.1
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    • 2015
  • Galaxy clusters have provided important information to understand the evolution of the universe, since the number density and mass of clusters are tightly related to the cosmological parameters. In addition, galaxy clusters are an excellent laboratory to investigate the galaxy evolution in dense environments. However, finding galaxy clusters at high redshift ($z{\geq}1$) still remains as a main subject in astronomy due to their rareness and difficulty in identifying such objects from optical imaging data alone. Here, we report a spectroscopic follow-up observation of distant galaxy cluster candidates identified by a deep optical-NIR dataset of Infrared Medium-deep Survey. Through the galaxy spectra taken with the IMACS instrument on the Magellan telescope, we confirm at least 3 massive clusters at z~0.92. Interestingly, the maximum spatial separation between these clusters is ~8Mpc, which implies that this system is a new supercluster in the distant universe. We also discuss properties of galaxies in these clusters based on multi-wavelength photometric data.

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KYDISC program : Galaxy Morphology in the Cluster Environment

  • Oh, Sree;Sheen, Yun-Kyeong;Kim, Minjin;Lee, Joon Hyeop;Kyeong, Jaemann;Ree, Chang H.;Park, Byeong-Gon;Yi, Sukyoung K.
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.41 no.2
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    • pp.60.3-61
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    • 2016
  • Galaxy morphology involves complex effects from both secular and non-secular evolution of galaxies. Although it is a final product of galaxy evolution, it gives a clue to the processes that the a galaxy has gone through. Galaxy clusters are the sites where the most massive galaxies are found, and thus the most dramatic merger histories are embedded. Our deep imaging program (${\mu}{\sim}28\;mag\;arcsec^{-2}$), KASI-Yonsei Deep Imaging Survey for Clusters (KYDISC), targets 14 Abell clusters at z = 0.016 - 0.14 using IMACS/Magellan telescope and MegaCam/CFHT to investigate cluster galaxies especially on low surface brightness features related to galaxy interactions. We visually classify galaxy morphology based on criteria related to secular or merger related evolution and find that the morphological mixture of galaxies varies considerably from cluster to cluster. Moreover it depends on the characteristics (e.g. cluster mass) of cluster itself which implies that environmental effects in cluster scale is also an important factor to the evolution of galaxies together with intrinsic (secular) and galaxy merger. Our deep imaging survey for morphological inspection of cluster galaxies with low surface brightness is expected to be a useful basis to understand the nature of cluster galaxies and their internal/external evolutionary path.

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Progress Report : Research on Detailed Morphology of Cluster Galaxies

  • Oh, Seulhee;Yi, Sukyoung K.;Sheen, Yun-Kyeong;Kyeong, Jaemann;Sung, Eon-Chang;Kim, Minjin;Park, Byeong-Gon
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.39 no.1
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    • pp.46.2-46.2
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    • 2014
  • Galaxy morphology is involved complex effects of both secular and non-secular evolution of galaxies. Although it is a final product of a galaxy evolution, it may give a clue for the process that the galaxy suffer. Galaxy clusters are the sites where the most massive galaxies are found, and the most dramatic merger histories are embedded. Morphology study in nearby universe, e.g. Virgo cluster, is well established, but for clusters at z ~ 0.1 it is only focused on bright galaxies due to observational limits. Our optical deep imaging of 14 Abell clusters at z = 0.014 - 0.16 using IMACS f/2 on a Magellan Badde 6.5-m telescope and MegaCam on a 3.8-m CFHT enable to classify detailed morphology. For the galaxies in our data, we investigated their morphology with several criteria related to secular or merger related evolution. Our research on detailed morphology of thousands of galaxies through deep imaging would give a general census of cluster galaxies and help to estimate the evolution of cluster galaxies.

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Progress Report : Quantifying and Classifying Peculiarity of Cluster Galaxies

  • Oh, Seulhee;Yi, Sukyoung K.;Sheen, Yun-Kyeong;Kyeong, Jaemann;Sung, Eon-Chang;Ho, Luis C.;Kim, Minjin;Park, Byeong-Gon
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.38 no.1
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    • pp.42.1-42.1
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    • 2013
  • In the LCDM paradigm, hierarchical merging is thought to play a key role in the formation and evolution of massive galaxies. Theoretical and observational studies suggest that massive galaxies started forming at high redshifts and were assembled via numerous mergers. Galaxy clusters are the sites where the most massive galaxies are found and the most dramatic merger histories are embedded. The previous work of Sheen et al. (2012) identified via visual inspection many massive galaxies with merger features in clusters, which surprised the community. In this study we aim to quantify peculiarity of galaxies to pin down the merger frequency in cluster environments more objectively. We have performed optical deep imaging of 4 Abell clusters by using IMACS f/2 on a Magellan Badde 6.5-m telescope. For the galaxies in our data, we applied GALFIT algorithm, which fits analytic models to galaxy data, and we analyzed their residuals. We present the preliminary results of our sample galaxies.

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