Deep Learning-Based Tracking and Lineage Reconstruction of Ligament Breakup
The disintegration of liquid sheets into ligaments and droplets involves highly transient, multi-scale dynamics that are difficult to quantify from high-speed shadowgraphy images. Identifying droplets, ligaments, and blobs formed during breakup, along with tracking across frames, is essential for spray analysis. However, conventional multi-object tracking frameworks impose strict one-to-one temporal associations and cannot represent one-to-many fragmentation events.
In this study, we present a two-stage deep learning framework for object detection and temporal relationship modeling across frames. The framework captures ligament deformation, fragmentation, and parent-child lineage during liquid sheet disintegration. In the first stage, a Faster R-CNN with a ResNet-50 backbone and Feature Pyramid Network detects and classifies ligaments and droplets in high-speed shadowgraphy recordings of an impinging Carbopol gel jet. A morphology-preserving synthetic data generation strategy augments the training set without introducing physically implausible configurations, achieving a held-out F1 score of up to 0.872 across fourteen original-to-synthetic configurations.
In the second stage, a Transformer-augmented multilayer perceptron classifies inter-frame associations into continuation, fragmentation (one-to-many), and non-association using physics-informed geometric features. Despite severe class imbalance, the model achieves 86.1% accuracy, 93.2% precision, and perfect recall (1.00) for fragmentation events. Together, the framework enables automated reconstruction of fragmentation trees, preservation of parent-child lineage, and extraction of breakup statistics such as fragment multiplicity and droplet size distributions. By explicitly identifying children droplets formed from ligament fragmentation, the framework provides automated analysis of the primary atomization mode.
The study is categorized under the subjects of Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, Artificial Intelligence, and Machine Learning, and can be cited as arXiv:2604.08711. The paper is available online, with a DOI issued by arXiv via DataCite, and was submitted by Vrushank Ahire on Thu, 9 Apr 2026 19:04:37 UTC. The submission has a size of 14,711 KB and is available in version v1.
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