closing(w, r, ...)
 ## S3 method for class 'owin':
closing(w, r, \dots, polygonal=NULL)
 ## S3 method for class 'ppp':
closing(w, r, \dots, polygonal=TRUE)
 ## S3 method for class 'psp':
closing(w, r, \dots, polygonal=TRUE)"owin"
    or a line segment pattern (object of class "psp")
    or a point pattern (object of class "ppp").as.mask
    controlling the pixel resolution, if a pixel approximation is usedpolygonal=TRUE) or
    a pixel grid approximation (polygonal=FALSE).r > 0, an object of class "owin" representing the
  closed region. If r=0, the result is identical to w.For a small radius $r$, the closing operation has the effect of smoothing out irregularities in the boundary of $W$. For larger radii, the closing operation smooths out concave features in the boundary. For very large radii, the closed set $W*$ becomes more and more convex.
opening for the opposite operation.  dilation, erosion for the basic
  operations.  
  
  owin,
  as.owin for information about windows.
data(letterR)
  v <- closing(letterR, 0.25, dimyx=256)
  plot(v, main="closing")
  plot(letterR, add=TRUE)Run the code above in your browser using DataLab