Zstacking
Z-stacking, also known as focus stacking, is a technique used to increase depth of field in digital imaging by capturing and combining multiple images taken at different focal planes along the optical axis. The goal is to produce a single image that is sharp from front to back, often with higher apparent resolution than a single shallow-focus frame.
In practice, a series of photos is collected with the focus gradually moving through the subject, typically
Processing involves selecting or blending in-focus regions from the stack. Common methods include focus measure-based selection,
Applications are widespread in light microscopy, histology, materials science, and macro photography of small subjects, where
Challenges include alignment errors, uneven illumination, computational demands, and artifacts such as halos or ghosting if