Tag Archives: observer

The Perfect Color Filter Array

We’ve seen how humans perceive color in daylight as a result of three types of photoreceptors in the retina called cones that absorb wavelengths of light from the scene with different sensitivities to the arriving spectrum.

Figure 1.  Quantitative Color Science.

A photographic digital imager attempts to mimic the workings of cones in the retina by usually having different color filters arranged in an array (CFA) on top of its photoreceptors, which we normally call pixels.  In a Bayer CFA configuration there are three filters named for the predominant wavelengths that each lets through (red, green and blue) arranged in quartets such as shown below:

Figure 2.  Bayer Color Filter Array: RGGB  layout.  Image under license from Cburnett, pixels shifted and text added.

A CFA is just one way to copy the action of cones:  Foveon for instance lets the sensing material itself perform the spectral separation.  It is the quality of the combined spectral filtering part of the imaging system (lenses, UV/IR, CFA, sensing material etc.) that determines how accurately a digital camera is able to capture color information from the scene.  So what are the characteristics of better systems and can perfection be achieved?  In this article I will pick up the discussion where it was last left off and, ignoring noise for now, attempt to answer this  question using CIE conventions, in the process gaining insight in the role of the compromise color matrix and developing a method to visualize its effects.[1]  Continue reading The Perfect Color Filter Array

Phase One IQ3 100MP Trichromatic vs Standard Back Linear Color, Part I

It is always interesting when innovative companies push the envelope of the state-of-the-art of a single component in their systems because a lot can be learned from before and after comparisons.   I was therefore excited when Phase One introduced a Trichromatic version of their Medium Format IQ3 100MP Digital Back last September because it could allows us to isolate the effects of tweaks to their Bayer Color Filter Array, assuming all else stays the same.

Figure 1. IQ3 100MP Trichromatic (left) vs the rest (right), from PhaseOne.com.   Units are not specified but one would assume that the vertical axis is relative spectral sensitivity and the horizontal axis represents wavelength.

Thanks to two virtually identical captures by David Chew at getDPI, and Erik Kaffehr’s intelligent questions at DPR, in the following articles I will explore the effect on linear color of the new Trichromatic CFA (TC) vs the old one on the Standard Back (SB).  In the process we will discover that – within the limits of my tests, procedures and understanding[1] – the Standard Back produces apparently more ‘accurate’ color while the Trichromatic produces better looking matrices, potentially resulting in ‘purer’ signals. Continue reading Phase One IQ3 100MP Trichromatic vs Standard Back Linear Color, Part I