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#16 | ||||||||
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Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Portland, OR
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Exposure: intensity of light falling on the sensor. This is a function of scene luminance, f-number, and shutter speed. Also filters, lens transmissivity, and perhaps other factors. I think this is the original and correct meaning of the word exposure. Luminance: This is the brightness of the image. It is separate from exposure. Sensitivity: Response to light. This is how the sensor responds to light. If it requires 9 photons to cause 1 level change, that is lower sensitivity than a sensor that only requires 3 photons. Read noise: All noises aside from photon shot noise. This includes all temporal noises such as reset noise, thermal noise, flicker noise, RTS noise, and amp noise. At base ISO, this type of noise only affects the extreme shadows. The bright parts of the image are only affected by photon shot noise. The higher the ISO, the more exposure zones that it affects. Here are some examples how these definitions affect the discussion: In the RED ONE, when the ISO setting is changed from 320 to 640, it doesn't actually change the exposure, sensitivity, or read noise of the camera, it just instructs the post processing to increase the brightness and it also increases the brightness of the display monitor. In the 5D2, when the ISO setting is changed from 200 to 400, it doesn't actually change the exposure or sensitivity of the camera, but it does decrease the read noise, and it does increase the brightness of the file, and it does increase the brightness of the display. In the 5D2, when the ISO setting is changed from 200 to 400 and the exposure is decreased one stop (e.g. f/4 to f/5.6), it does change the exposure, does not change the sensitivity, it does decrease the read noise. The brightness of the file and display remains the same. Read-noise dominated zones, such as shadows, don't get a full stop worse. Quote:
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Even Canon cameras only improve up to ISO 1600. 3200 is hardware analog gain, but has no improvement in read noise. It's a design compromise. The 5D2 has a nice low read noise at high ISO, but at low ISO it's terrible. I'm sure they will figure it out in the future. Quote:
Third, the range of bits "used" is the same on both. As explained in the Noise, Dynamic Range, and Bit Depth section of Emil Martinec's essay, none of Canon's cameras suffer quantization error under any circumstances, even when pushing ISO 100 ten stops, so there is literally no benefit to the 14 bits at ISO 1600. In fact, at ISO 1600 you can replace the raw 14-bit Canon data with 10-bit data and lose absolutely no image information whatsoever. Take a look at this visual demonstration: Canon 40D raw file compared from 14 bits to 7 bits So essentially your comparison comes down to the fact that at ISO 1600, the 5D2 has less read noise than the RED ONE. Quote:
I hope that helps clarify things. |
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#17 | |
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Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Lancashire UK
Posts: 496
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Cheers Avey |
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