Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2008/11/02
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]On Nov 2, 2008, at 1:02 PM, Frank Filippone wrote: > I understand this argument..... the thickness of the IR coating is > in the > order of angstroms.... and at an angle, would be "different" in > passband > than at 90 degrees.... so the images at the corners would have some > slight > change in passband.......IOW, the colors on the periphery would be > different than in the center. But it is fixed, and based purely on > the > angle of incidence. Easily corrected, as the 6 bit coding does for > Leica > now...... The only "color" that would be different at the periphery is IR; the IR-cut interference filter has no effect on other wavelengths. Therefore, an algorithm that subtracts red (the sensor's interpretation of IR) in a graduated fashion from the center to the periphery thanks to lens coding would work correctly only if there is a predictable component of IR everywhere in the image. It will get it all wrong if there is no IR, or nonuniform IR, in the image. Which is to say EVERY natural image! The algorithm you're thinking of may be the one that corrects for fall-off of illumination at the periphery. Since this is a geometric property of the lens, and not color- dependent, it is indeed fixed, predictable, and removable. Ditto for chromatic aberration. Ditto even for lenses whose glass has a color cast. But not for IR. > So why the fuss over putting the IR coating on and correcting it > using the > coding and algorithms in the camera?. > > And why I still do not accept the story........ still looking to > be > convinced...... But, even aside from the effect of the angle of light on the effect of an IR filter, the IR color cast CAN'T be corrected by an algorithm in firmware or software, because the contribution of IR to an image is not constant...not from image to image nor from one part of an image to another part...filter or no filter. Consider a piece of the proverbial black polyester, which reflects IR, which registers in the red-sensitive photosites and causes the sensor to see red, because it can't distinguish red from IR. This produces a reddish color cast. Beside the piece of polyester is a piece of fabric whose color to the human eye really is a red-tinted black, and which reflects no IR. The two pieces (black + IR, black + red) look identical in color to the sensor, but not to the eye. A software algorithm that subtracts red from a predominantly black region of the image will do the same to both the color-casted fabric and the true- color fabric. Since the firmware has no way of knowing how much of the signal from a red photosite is due to invisible IR and how much to visible red, the result is an image that shows the IR-reflecting fabric in its true color (maybe) and the true-color fabric with a green cast! The only way of removing the IR signal is to remove the IR from the light that reaches the sensor. Why would camera manufacturers even go to the trouble and expense of putting an IR-cut filter in their cameras if the problem were solvable in firmware? --howard