Larry,

Read through this, it may help your understanding (or it may confuse
the hell out of you):

http://theory.uchicago.edu/~ejm/pix/20d/tests/noise/noise-p3.html#ETTR

And the entire document:

http://theory.uchicago.edu/~ejm/pix/20d/tests/noise/index.html



On Sun, Apr 10, 2011 at 8:27 PM, Larry Colen <[email protected]> wrote:
> In my typical geeky fashion, I'm trying to wrap my head around all of the 
> ramifications of adjusting sensitivity (ISO) on my camera. Please correct the 
> errors in my understanding.
>
> In the simplest form, it is a measure of how many LSBs per photon (or tens, 
> thousands or millions of photons).
>
> If the base is 10 photons, per LSB at ISO 100, 1,000 photons hitting a sensor 
> site gives the value 100, at ISO 200, it'll give 200, and at 6,400 1,000 
> photons will cause the raw fill to read 6,400 for that sensor site.
>
> In a similar vein, if we have 14 bits of data, and at base ISO (100), 14 
> stops of dynamic range. That gives us a maximum data value of 16,384 which 
> means at the above sensitivity, 163,840 photons will cause the sensor to read 
> maximum value, and any more than that cause data to be clipped.
> If we then increase the gain by a factor of two, then at ISO 200, we are 
> expressing 13 stops of dynamic range in 14 bits of data, 5 photons will cause 
> an LSB worth of change in the data, but it will only take 8,192 photons to 
> clip in the data path.
>
> Since the data width is constant, every time we double the sensitivity, we 
> force ourselves to only use the lower, noisier, half of the signal.  The 
> benefit of this is that we can read that narrow band of the the sensor with 
> more resolution so at ISO 12,800, rather than only having 7 bits of data for 
> the lower 7 stops of dynamic range, we have 14 bits of data to work with. 
> This is why using high ISOs give us more contrast.
>
> It seems to me that if we are shooting a low contrast situation, such as 
> clouds on a grey sky, or with a mediocre, low contrast lens, we could 
> compensate by using a higher ISO to spread the fewer stops of dynamic range 
> in the input out over more bits of data, at the cost of more noise, because 
> we're constraining ourselves to the lower, noisier portion of the signal.
>
> Is this basically accurate?
>
> --
> Larry Colen [email protected] sent from i4est
>
>
>
>
>
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-- 
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http://www.davidparsonsphoto.com

Aloha Photographer Photoblog
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