: In the 1950s, U.S. legislators like Sen. Pat McCarran and Rep. Francis E. Walter invoked this imagery to establish tiered-entry systems for the U.S. border.
Historically, the "invasion image" has been used in political debates to characterize large-scale immigration.
: It simulates how a "non-wetting phase" (like oil or gas) moves through small, incremental steps into a domain based on capillary pressure. The Invasion image
: The workflow begins with a 2D or 3D image of pore space, defining "inlets" and identifying pixels with the highest capillary value to track the fluid's path. 3. Cultural & Media Representations
: Images of monuments, such as the Alexander Pushkin statue in Kharkiv painted red, are used on social platforms like Telegram to symbolize the atrocities of an invasion and mobilize public action. : In the 1950s, U
In the field of fluid dynamics and porous media, is a specialized algorithm.
: Recent projects like "Diaries of War and Life" analyze how smartphone technology creates a new "invasion image"—focusing on "quiet trauma" and intimate personal moments rather than just battlefield violence. Francis E
: Sociologists note that this imagery often surfaces during times of economic anxiety (such as the 1990s recession) to frame immigrants as an "Other" or "parasites," shifting focus from human rights to perceived resource drainage. 2. Scientific Algorithm (IBIP)