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Erosion
User Guide > How to Work with... > Image Processing and Cleanup > Advanced Image Processing and Correction > Mathematical Morphology > Erosion

Erosion is one of the fundamental operations in the mathematical morphology. It is usually applied to black and white images, but can also be applicable to grayscale ones. The basic effect of the operation is to erode away the boundaries of regions of foreground pixels (white pixels). Thus, areas of foreground pixels shrink in size, and holes within those areas become larger. Applying this to the grayscale image will make bright objects smaller, that is, the image will be darker.

Both erosion and dilation work by translating the structuring element to various points in the input image, and examining the intersection between the translated kernel coordinates and the input image coordinates. For example, in the case of erosion, the output coordinate set consists of just those points to which the origin of the structuring element can be translated, while the element still remains entirely "within" the input image. In the case of dilation, the effect is the opposite.

For more information, see ImGearRasterProcessing.Erode Method