From Photon to Pixel – The Digital Camera Handbook 2nd Edition

The Digital Camera Handbook

Specificaties
Gebonden, 464 blz. | Engels
John Wiley & Sons | e druk, 2017
ISBN13: 9781786301376
Rubricering
John Wiley & Sons e druk, 2017 9781786301376
Verwachte levertijd ongeveer 16 werkdagen

Samenvatting

This second edition of the fully revised and updated From Photon to Pixel presents essential elements in modern digital photographic devices. Our universal infatuation with photography profoundly affects its usage and development.
While some sides of photographic culture remain wholly unchanged art photography, journalistic and advertising photography, scientific photography, etc. new facets emerge: leisure or travel photography, everyday life photography, anecdotal, observational or unusual photography, and microcosm, or micro–community, photography with its culmination in the narcissistic selfie. These new forms combine an often simplified manner of photographing and modern means of instantaneous, remote and mass communication. This book does not extend into the sociological study of photography, instead it explains how the digital camera works by examining in detail each of the components that constitutes it to provide the reader with a preliminary guide into the inner workings of this device.

Specificaties

ISBN13:9781786301376
Taal:Engels
Bindwijze:gebonden
Aantal pagina's:464

Inhoudsopgave

Acknowledgements xiii
<p>Chapter 1. First Contact&nbsp; 1</p>
<p>1.1. Toward a society of the image&nbsp; 1</p>
<p>1.1.1. A bit of vocabulary in the form of zoology 4</p>
<p>1.1.2. A brief history of photography 7</p>
<p>1.2. The reason for this book 10</p>
<p>1.3. Physical principle of image formation&nbsp; 11</p>
<p>1.3.1. Light&nbsp; 11</p>
<p>1.3.2. Electromagnetic radiation: wave and particle&nbsp; 12</p>
<p>1.3.3. The pinhole 13</p>
<p>1.3.4. From pinholes to photo cameras 15</p>
<p>1.4. Camera block diagram&nbsp; 21</p>
<p>Chapter 2. The Photographic Objective Lens&nbsp; 25</p>
<p>2.1. Focusing&nbsp; 26</p>
<p>2.1.1. From focusing to blurring 26</p>
<p>2.1.2. Focusing complex scenes 28</p>
<p>2.2. Depth of field&nbsp; 34</p>
<p>2.2.1. Long–distance photography&nbsp; 35</p>
<p>2.2.2. Macrophotography&nbsp; 36</p>
<p>2.2.3. Hyperfocal 37</p>
<p>2.3. Angle of view 38</p>
<p>2.3.1. Angle of view and human visual system&nbsp; 38</p>
<p>2.3.2. Angle of view and focal length&nbsp; 39</p>
<p>2.4. Centered systems 41</p>
<p>2.4.1. Of the importance of glasses in lenses&nbsp; 42</p>
<p>2.4.2. Chromatic corrections 45</p>
<p>2.4.3. The choice of an optical system 47</p>
<p>2.4.4. Diaphragms and apertures&nbsp; 50</p>
<p>2.4.5. Zoom&nbsp; 53</p>
<p>2.4.6. Zoom and magnification 54</p>
<p>2.5. Fisheye systems&nbsp; 57</p>
<p>2.5.1. Projection functions&nbsp; 57</p>
<p>2.5.2. Circular and diagonal fisheyes&nbsp; 59</p>
<p>2.5.3. Fisheyes in practice&nbsp; 61</p>
<p>2.6. Diffraction and incoherent light 63</p>
<p>2.6.1. Coherence: incoherence 63</p>
<p>2.6.2. Definitions and notations 65</p>
<p>2.6.3. For a single wavelength&nbsp; 66</p>
<p>2.6.4. Circular diaphragm&nbsp; 68</p>
<p>2.6.5. Discussion 70</p>
<p>2.6.6. Case of a wide spectrum 71</p>
<p>2.6.7. Separation power 73</p>
<p>2.7. Camera calibration 74</p>
<p>2.7.1. Some geometry of image formation 74</p>
<p>2.7.2. Multi–image calibration: bundle adjustment&nbsp; 77</p>
<p>2.7.3. Fisheye camera calibration&nbsp; 78</p>
<p>2.8. Aberrations 79</p>
<p>2.8.1. Chromatic aberration 79</p>
<p>2.8.2. Geometrical aberrations&nbsp; 80</p>
<p>2.8.3. Internal reflections 82</p>
<p>2.8.4. Vignetting 83</p>
<p>2.8.5. The correction of the aberrations 86</p>
<p>Chapter 3. The Digital Sensor&nbsp; 89</p>
<p>3.1. Sensor size 90</p>
<p>3.1.1. Sensor aspect ratio 90</p>
<p>3.1.2. Sensor dimensions 91</p>
<p>3.1.3. Pixel size&nbsp; 93</p>
<p>3.2. The photodetector 93</p>
<p>3.2.1. Image detection materials 93</p>
<p>3.2.2. CCDs&nbsp; 94</p>
<p>3.2.3. CMOSs 97</p>
<p>3.2.4. Back–side illuminated arrangement (BSI), stacked arrangement 101</p>
<p>3.2.5. Stacked arrangements 102</p>
<p>3.2.6. Influence of the choice of technology on noise 103</p>
<p>3.2.7. Conclusion 104</p>
<p>3.3. Integrated filters in the sensor&nbsp; 104</p>
<p>3.3.1. Microlenses&nbsp; 104</p>
<p>3.3.2. Anti–aliasing filters&nbsp; 106</p>
<p>3.3.3. Chromatic selection filters&nbsp; 109</p>
<p>Chapter 4. Radiometry and Photometry 111</p>
<p>4.1. Radiometry: physical parameters&nbsp; 112</p>
<p>4.1.1. Definitions 112</p>
<p>4.1.2. Radiating objects: emissivity and source temperature&nbsp; 116</p>
<p>4.1.3. Industrial lighting sources&nbsp; 122</p>
<p>4.1.4. Reflecting objects: reflectance and radiosity&nbsp; 123</p>
<p>4.2. Subjective aspects: photometry&nbsp; 125</p>
<p>4.2.1. Luminous efficiency curve&nbsp; 126</p>
<p>4.2.2. Photometric quantities&nbsp; 128</p>
<p>4.3. Real systems&nbsp; 128</p>
<p>4.3.1. Etendue 129</p>
<p>4.3.2. Camera photometry&nbsp; 130</p>
<p>4.4. Radiometry and photometry in practice 134</p>
<p>4.4.1. Measurement with a photometer 134</p>
<p>4.4.2. Integrated measurements 137</p>
<p>4.5. From the watt to the ISO 138</p>
<p>4.5.1. ISO sensitivity: definitions&nbsp; 138</p>
<p>4.5.2. Standard output ISO sensitivity SOS&nbsp; 143</p>
<p>4.5.3. Recommended exposure index&nbsp; 143</p>
<p>4.5.4. Exposure value 144</p>
<p>Chapter 5. Color 145</p>
<p>5.1. From electromagnetic radiation to perception 147</p>
<p>5.1.1. The color of objects&nbsp; 147</p>
<p>5.1.2. Color perception&nbsp; 149</p>
<p>5.2. Color spaces&nbsp; 151</p>
<p>5.2.1. The CIE 1931 RGB space&nbsp; 153</p>
<p>5.2.2. Other chromatic spaces&nbsp; 160</p>
<p>5.2.3. The Lab space 162</p>
<p>5.2.4. Other colorimetric spaces 163</p>
<p>5.2.5. TV spaces 164</p>
<p>5.2.6. The sRGB space&nbsp; 165</p>
<p>5.2.7. ICC profile 168</p>
<p>5.2.8. Chromatic thresholds 169</p>
<p>5.3. The white balance 170</p>
<p>5.3.1. Presettings 171</p>
<p>5.3.2. Color calibration&nbsp; 172</p>
<p>5.3.3. Gray test pattern usage&nbsp; 173</p>
<p>5.3.4. Automatic white balance techniques 173</p>
<p>5.3.5. The Retinex model&nbsp; 175</p>
<p>5.4. Acquiring color&nbsp; 178</p>
<p>5.4.1. True color images&nbsp; 181</p>
<p>5.4.2. Chromatic arrays 186</p>
<p>5.4.3. Chromatic selection of the arrays&nbsp; 192</p>
<p>5.5. Reconstructing color: demosaicing 195</p>
<p>5.5.1. Linear interpolation demosaicing&nbsp; 196</p>
<p>5.5.2. Per channel, nonlinear interpolations&nbsp; 199</p>
<p>5.5.3. Interchannel, non–linear interpolations 199</p>
<p>Chapter 6. Image Quality 205</p>
<p>6.1. Qualitative attributes 206</p>
<p>6.1.1. The signal noise ratio 207</p>
<p>6.1.2. Resolution 211</p>
<p>6.1.3. The modulation transfer function&nbsp; 215</p>
<p>6.1.4. Sharpness&nbsp; 221</p>
<p>6.1.5. Acutance&nbsp; 221</p>
<p>6.2. Global image quality assessment 226</p>
<p>6.2.1. Reference–based evaluations 228</p>
<p>6.2.2. No–reference evaluation&nbsp; 230</p>
<p>6.2.3. Perception model evaluation 234</p>
<p>6.3. Information capacity 237</p>
<p>6.3.1. The number of degrees of freedom 238</p>
<p>6.3.2. Entropy 243</p>
<p>6.3.3. Information capacity in photography&nbsp; 245</p>
<p>6.4. What about aesthetics?&nbsp; 252</p>
<p>6.4.1. Birkhoff s measure of beauty 253</p>
<p>6.4.2. Gestalt theory 254</p>
<p>6.4.3. Shannon information theory, Kolmogorov Complexity and Computational Complexity theory&nbsp; 254</p>
<p>6.4.4. Learning aesthetic by machine&nbsp; 254</p>
<p>Chapter 7. Noise in Digital Photography 257</p>
<p>7.1. Photon noise&nbsp; 258</p>
<p>7.1.1. Fluctuations in the optical signal 258</p>
<p>7.1.2. The Poisson hypothesis in practice 261</p>
<p>7.1.3. From photon flux to electrical charge&nbsp; 262</p>
<p>7.2. Electronic noise&nbsp; 265</p>
<p>7.2.1. Dark current&nbsp; 265</p>
<p>7.2.2. Pixel reading noise&nbsp; 266</p>
<p>7.2.3. Crosstalk noise 266</p>
<p>7.2.4. Reset noise 267</p>
<p>7.2.5. Quantization noise 267</p>
<p>7.3. Non–uniform noise 268</p>
<p>7.3.1. Non–uniformity in detectors 268</p>
<p>7.3.2. Salt–and–pepper noise 268</p>
<p>7.3.3. Image reconstruction and compression noise&nbsp; 268</p>
<p>7.4. Noise models for image acquisition 269</p>
<p>7.4.1. Orders of magnitude&nbsp; 270</p>
<p>Chapter 8. Image Representation: Coding and Formats 273</p>
<p>8.1. Native format and metadata&nbsp; 274</p>
<p>8.2. RAW (native) format 275</p>
<p>8.2.1. Contents of the RAW format 278</p>
<p>8.2.2. Advantages of the native format 280</p>
<p>8.2.3. Drawbacks of the native format 281</p>
<p>8.2.4. Standardization of native formats&nbsp; 281</p>
<p>8.3. Metadata&nbsp; 283</p>
<p>8.3.1. The XMP standard&nbsp; 283</p>
<p>8.3.2. The Exif metadata format 284</p>
<p>8.4. Lossless compression formats&nbsp; 286</p>
<p>8.4.1. General lossless coding algorithms 287</p>
<p>8.4.2. Lossless JPEG coding 288</p>
<p>8.5. Image formats for graphic design&nbsp; 289</p>
<p>8.5.1. The PNG format&nbsp; 289</p>
<p>8.5.2. The TIFF format&nbsp; 291</p>
<p>8.5.3. The GIF format&nbsp; 292</p>
<p>8.6. Lossy compression formats&nbsp; 292</p>
<p>8.6.1. JPEG&nbsp; 294</p>
<p>8.6.2. JPEG 2000 299</p>
<p>8.7. Tiled formats&nbsp; 304</p>
<p>8.8. Video coding&nbsp; 305</p>
<p>8.8.1. Video encoding and standardization 306</p>
<p>8.8.2. MPEG coding 307</p>
<p>8.9. Compressed sensing&nbsp; 310</p>
<p>Chapter 9. Elements of Camera Hardware&nbsp; 313</p>
<p>9.1. Image processors 313</p>
<p>9.1.1. Global architecture and functions&nbsp; 314</p>
<p>9.1.2. The central processing unit&nbsp; 315</p>
<p>9.1.3. The digital signal processor 318</p>
<p>9.1.4. The graphics processing unit 320</p>
<p>9.2. Memory 321</p>
<p>9.2.1. Volatile memory&nbsp; 321</p>
<p>9.2.2. Archival memory cards&nbsp; 321</p>
<p>9.3. Screens 327</p>
<p>9.3.1. Two screen types 327</p>
<p>9.3.2. Performance&nbsp; 329</p>
<p>9.3.3. Choice of technology 330</p>
<p>9.4. The shutter 333</p>
<p>9.4.1. Mechanical shutters&nbsp; 333</p>
<p>9.4.2. Electronic shutters 333</p>
<p>9.5. Measuring focus&nbsp; 335</p>
<p>9.5.1. Maximum contrast detection 337</p>
<p>9.5.2. Phase detection&nbsp; 340</p>
<p>9.5.3. Focusing on multiple targets 341</p>
<p>9.5.4. Telemeter configuration and geometry 342</p>
<p>9.5.5. Mechanics of the autofocus system 343</p>
<p>9.5.6. Autofocus in practice 344</p>
<p>9.6. Stabilization&nbsp; 346</p>
<p>9.6.1. Motion sensors 346</p>
<p>9.6.2. Compensating for movement 349</p>
<p>9.6.3. Video stabilization 352</p>
<p>9.7. Additions to the lens assembly: supplementary lenses and filters&nbsp; 353</p>
<p>9.7.1. Focal length adjustment&nbsp; 353</p>
<p>9.7.2. Infra–red filters 356</p>
<p>9.7.3. Attenuation filters 357</p>
<p>9.7.4. Polarizing filters&nbsp; 358</p>
<p>9.7.5. Chromatic filters&nbsp; 365</p>
<p>9.7.6. Colored filters 366</p>
<p>9.7.7. Special effect filters&nbsp; 367</p>
<p>9.8. Power cells 367</p>
<p>9.8.1. Batteries&nbsp; 368</p>
<p>9.8.2. Rechargeable Ni–Cd batteries&nbsp; 368</p>
<p>9.8.3. Lithium–ion batteries 369</p>
<p>Chapter 10. Photographic Software&nbsp; 373</p>
<p>10.1. Integrated software&nbsp; 374</p>
<p>10.1.1. Noise reduction&nbsp; 374</p>
<p>10.1.2. Classic approaches&nbsp; 375</p>
<p>10.1.3. Iterative methods 376</p>
<p>10.1.4. Non–local approaches&nbsp; 377</p>
<p>10.1.5. Facial detection&nbsp; 379</p>
<p>10.1.6. Motion tracking 382</p>
<p>10.1.7. Image rotation&nbsp; 384</p>
<p>10.1.8. Panoramas&nbsp; 385</p>
<p>10.2. Imported software&nbsp; 394</p>
<p>10.2.1. Improving existing functions&nbsp; 395</p>
<p>10.2.2. Creating new functions 395</p>
<p>10.3. External software 397</p>
<p>10.3.1. High–dynamic images (HDR)&nbsp; 397</p>
<p>10.3.2. Plenoptic imaging: improving the depth of field 402</p>
<p>10.3.3. Improving resolution: super–resolution&nbsp; 408</p>
<p>10.3.4. Flutter–shutters&nbsp; 412</p>
<p>Bibliography 417</p>
<p>Index&nbsp; 439</p>

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        From Photon to Pixel – The Digital Camera Handbook 2nd Edition