Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/11/14
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]DC or Dan'- The chilling of the film in astronophotography was to diminish reciprocity failure which denotes the breakdown of the rule that doubling the time of exposure doubles the exposure. at extremely long exposures, the photons are so few and far between that for every two photons that hits a silver atom and dislodges an electron, thus exposing it, there is a silver atom where the displace electron has gone back to the lower energy state, and that silver atom is no longer exposed- a law of diminishing returns, if you will. Chilling the film keeps the atom from re-grabbing the displace electron so there is enough total exposure to make an image- some of those plates are exposed for hours in holders chilled with either dry ice or liquid nitrogen at the prime focus of large mirrors- Personally, I'd hate to have to hold 'the birdie' that long! I always was fascinated with astrophotography, but never had the patience! Dan" dwpost@msn.com