Noise Models in Image Processing
Noise Models in Image Processing
INTRODUCTION:
The main source of noise in digital images arises during image acquisition
(digitization) or during image transmission. The performance of image sensor is affected by
variety of reasons such as environmental condition during image acquisition or by the quality
of the sensing element themselves. For instance, during acquiring images with CCD camera,
sensor temperature and light levels are major factors that affecting the amount of noise in the
image after the resulting. Images are corrupted while during transmission of images. The
principal reason of noise is due to interfering in the channel which is used for the images
transmission .
Image noise can be classified as Impulse noise (Salt-and-pepper noise), Amplifier
noise (Gaussian noise), Shot noise, Quantization noise (uniform noise), Film grain, onisotropic noise, Multiplicative noise (Speckle noise) and Periodic noise. We can model a
noisy image as follows:
Where A(x ,y) is the original image pixel value and B(x ,y) is the noise in the image and C(x
,y) is the resulting noise image.
UNIFORM NOISE:
The uniform noise cause by quantizing the pixels of image to a number of distinct
levels is known as quantization noise. It has approximately uniform distribution. In the
uniform noise the level of the gray values of the noise are uniformly distributed across a
specified range. Uniform noise can be used to generate any different type of noise
distribution. This noise is often used to degrade images for the evaluation of image
restoration algorithms. This noise provides the most neutral or unbiased noise.
RAYLEIGH NOISE:
Radar range and velocity images typically contain noise that can be modeled by the
Rayleigh distribution.
GAMMA NOISE:
The noise can be obtained by the low-pass filtering of laser based images
CONCLUSION:
The noise models studied are Uniform , Gaussian, Rayleigh, Salt & pepper, Gamma
have being properly analyzed . Thus we can say that the these are the different types of noise
that creep in images during image acquisition or transmission. Light is also thrown on the
causes of these noises and their major sources.