A. Aerts
University of Antwerp
6 Papers
116 Citations
A. Aerts is an academic researcher from University of Antwerp. The author has contributed to research in topics: Engineering & Principal component analysis. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 6 publications.
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Papers
Use of microscopic XRF for non‐destructive analysis in art and archaeometry
Koen Janssens,G. Vittiglio,I. Deraedt,A. Aerts,Bart Vekemans,Laszlo Vincze,F. Wei,I. De Ryck,O. Schalm,Freddy Adams,A. Rindby,Arndt Knöchel,Alexandre Simionovici,Anatoly Snigirev +13 more
TL;DR: In this article, various application possibilities of microscopic x-ray fluorescence and associated methods for the characterization and provenance analysis of objects and materials of cultural heritage value are discussed by means of a number of case studies.
238
Automated segmentation of μ‐XRF image sets
TL;DR: The combined use of principal component analysis (PCA) and K-means clustering (KMC) for the segmentation and (semi-)quantitative calibration of multivariate μ-XRF data sets is proposed and evaluated.
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Corrosion phenomena in electron, proton and synchrotron X-ray microprobe analysis of Roman glass from Qumran, Jordan
Koen Janssens,A. Aerts,Laszlo Vincze,Freddy Adams,Changyi Yang,R.J. Utui,Klas Malmqvist,Keith W. Jones,Martin Radtke,S. Garbe,F. Lechtenberg,Arndt Knöchel,Hilde Wouters +12 more
TL;DR: In this article, a series of 89 glass fragments of Roman glass were studied using electron, proton and synchrotron radiation induced X-ray emission from microscopic areas on the sample surface.
23
Trace-Level Microanalysis of Roman Glass from Khirbet Qumrân, Israel
TL;DR: A series of Roman glasses were studied using scanning electron microscopy and synchrotron radiation induced X-ray fluorescence as mentioned in this paper to obtain a better insight into the origin of these objects and the fact that the composition of this large collection is nearly the same for almost all the objects appears to support the view that Qumrân was a centre of the perfume industry in the Middle East in ancient times; the glass vials and bottles being used as receptacles for perfume, ointment, etc.
22
A chemical investigation of altered jade art objects
A. Aerts,Koen Janssens,F. C. Adams +2 more
- 01 Jan 1995
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