Theories of moiré deflectometry are presented based on scalar diffraction theory. It is shown that the moiré effect is not a pure geometric phenomenon but actually the result of multishearing interference. By performing zeroth-order or first-order filtering, the field in the plane of observation is seen to be the result of double- or triple-shearing interference, respectively. With first-order filtering, the intensity distribution is proved to be a strict cosinusoidal intensity distribution, and the diffraction effect, which depends on the distance between two gratings, affects just the phase shift of the moiré fringes. Compared with previous research, a more precise relation between the unwrapped phase and the deflection angles is obtained. The results will be very useful for image processing of moiré patterns with Fourier transform profilometry and phase-shift methods.
Chrysanthemum coronarium is an economically important plant in Asia, and used medicinally, ornamentally and as a vegetable. In April 2017, leaf spot disease on C. coronarium was observed in Shiyan, Hubei, China. A single-spore isolate was obtained and identified based on morphology and sequence analysis using four regions (rDNA ITS, GAPDH, EF-1α, and RPB2). The results indicated that the fungus is Alternaria argyranthemi. The pathogenicity tests revealed that the species could cause severe leaf spot and blight disease on the host. This is the first report of leaf spot disease on C. coronarium caused by A. argyranthemi in the world, which is also a new record of Alternaria species in China.
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