Olympus-OM
[Top] [All Lists]

[OM] Re: Baffin Island Photos

Subject: [OM] Re: Baffin Island Photos
From: Garth <garth@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Wed, 30 Aug 2006 09:58:33 -0600
Tim Randles wrote:
> Thanks for the detailed explanations, although I am a big baffled by some of 
> the terminology. 
> 
> What is "noise?"

Tim:

To expand a bit on Chuck Norcutt's explanation, there's "data" and 
there's "noise," and, in the context of a photo, "data" is a 
more-or-less accurate representation of an image's brightness and colour 
values by each image-capturing pixel on an imaging chip, whereas "noise" 
is an inaccurate (sometimes *wildly* inaccurate) representation.

So, as Chuck intimated, a "noisy" imaging sensor will display a lot of 
random coloured (and randomly-bright) pixels in an area of the image 
that was *supposed* to be relatively dark and featureless, such as a 
deep shadow.  You can minimize this effect by setting your ISO to manual 
and its lowest setting (typically 50 or 100 ISO).

Canon's reputation for having low-noise imaging chips is becoming 
legendary -- in this respect, Canon's the 600-pound gorilla in the room, 
and the standard to meet or beat by competitors now and in the future. 
Some people ascribe this relative lack of noise to the fact that Canon 
uses an imaging technology with the acronym CMOS (Complementary 
Metal-Oxide Semiconductor), whereas most of the competition uses CCD 
(Charge-Coupled Device) technology.  Canon's technology is also largely 
in-house -- they make their own imaging sensors, rather than sourcing 
them from third parties.

However, there's technology and there's technology.  Fuji (for instance) 
uses CCD, but their imaging sensors are actually considered to be fairly 
low-noise.  This is due in part to the choice of chip (there's a variety 
of CCD chips out there and they have differing characteristics) and part 
to the amount and type of post-processing that the camera's smarts do to 
the image after it leaves the chip and before it gets stored in memory.

Most professional astronomers used (and still use) CCD imaging, though 
they sometimes do some fairly exotic things to maintain image quality 
(such as cool the chips using liquid nitrogen or some other cryogenic 
technique).  Cooling the chip also helps keep noise down.  (As a related 
note, my KonicaMinolta A1 takes generally excellent pictures, but I and 
others have noticed that, if we leave the camera on for long periods of 
time, the guts heat up, and the resulting images get noisier the warmer 
the innards of the camera are.)

The Holy Grail is a noiseless chip, but this is impossible due to 
constraints of physics.  (It was also impossible with film, BTW.)  The 
more post-processing that is done to a noisy image, the more "plastic" 
the resulting image seems to appear.  The Four-Thirds System is reputed 
to have something more of a handicap than other imaging formats/sizes, 
because a smaller imaging chip needs to pack more pixels into a smaller 
space, and the pixels themselves need to be smaller and closer together, 
in order to get the same megapixel count as their competition.  Both of 
these strategies tend to increase image noise.

Like most things in life, choice of camera system is a series of 
trade-offs/compromises.  If you *really* like a compact SLR system, 
you'll stick with something like Four-Thirds (which is what the 
E-thingies of Olympus are), whereas if you're really hyped about getting 
low-noise imaging, Four-Thirds will not be your first choice.  Right 
now, I suspect that choice would almost always be Canon, though things 
could change in the future.


Garth

==============================================
List usage info:     http://www.zuikoholic.com
List nannies:        olympusadmin@xxxxxxxxxx
==============================================

<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>
Sponsored by Tako
Impressum | Datenschutz