Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/07/09
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Jean, Thanks for your comments. I think that you have mis-understood what I was driving at -and re-reading it I think that I may not have been terribly well. I started to write a response to you but it rapidly became much more technical than the LUG would be interested in - no, HONESTLY,guys - can I suggest that we take this off-list. We can then produce an agreed note which we can put back on the list. Yours, Peter Dzwig Jean Louchet wrote: > Hi, it's me again :-) > > >>From: Adam Bridge <abridge@gmail.com> >>Subject: Re: [Leica] Fungus in camera >>To: Leica Users Group <lug@leica-users.org> >>Message-ID: <4cfa589b040701233643a4a3ac@mail.gmail.com> >>Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 >> >>It seems very odd to me that Leica is trying to eliminate the >>anit-aliasing filter. I distinctly remember my digital signal >>processing courses that state that before you sample an analog signal >>you have to limit the bandwidth with a filter to at least half the >>sampling frequence (and that would be if you had a perfect low-pass >>filter, you have to go lower for real-world filters.) > > > Yes, _before you sample_, not after. The point is that the word "filter" > has 2 different meanings. The only filter that will work BEFORE sampling > is an optical filter (a piece of glass). After sampling, the only possible > resource is digital filters (image processing algorithms) but the harm has > already been done, and you just can't recover information that has been > lost (as I wrote in a recent posting). > > >>Moire patterns would be the result because artifacts would be generated >>by digital sampling. > > > YES but how could the algorithm make the distinction between an artefact > moire and the pattern on one's shirt? > > >>I had a real-world example of this where we were >>measuring ion-acoustic waves in very low-density argon plasmas and got >>results that were really exciting - until the experimentalist realized >>he hadn't built-in the low-pass filter. When the filter was installed >>the "exciting" results vanished and things approached theory. Oh darn. >>But that wasn't with optical systems and maybe someone who's won the >>galactic institude prize for extreme cleverness has figured out how to >>avoid the artifacts. >> > > I suppose you used an analog filter BEFORE sampling to solve the problem > (in acoustics, analog filters are not pieces of glass but probably some > mechanical device?). Once sampled it's too late! > > >>From: Peter Dzwig <pdzwig@summaventures.com> >>Subject: Re: [Leica] Fungus now filters >>To: Leica Users Group <lug@leica-users.org> >>Message-ID: <40E559B5.6060404@summaventures.com> >>Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed >> >>The point of anti-aliasing is to smooth out "the jaggies", the jagged >>edges in digitised images caused by finite resolution. > > > You are referring to what Computer Graphics people call "antialiasing" > but the same word does not refer to the same reality. What they call > antialiasing is the set of rendering techniques to smooth out edges (like > the Bresenham algorithm). The aliasing problem found in digital cameras is > another issue, it is a sampling problem as Adam said, not a rendering > problem. > > >>In theory with a large enough number of pixels in a camera you should be >>able to ignore the effects because the human eye wouldn't be able to >>resolve them. > > > This is not true. Even with as many pixels as you want, if the lens > resolution is good enough to transmit spatial frequencies higher than half > the pixel frequency AND the sensor elements are not contiguous, there will > be aliasing which will generate low- and medium-frequency interferences > that anybody will be able to see (even without a very good sight). > > >>The need for anti-aliasing is a result of the artifacts introduced by >>the availability of a finite number of pixels to display an image in. >>For a standard monitor this number is 1.25Mp and here anti-aliasing is >>necessary without doubt. > > > No, you are again mixing up two different problems, one is sampling and > the other one is rendering. > >>It MAY be - and I say may because I don't know for certain - that at 14 >>MP, up to certain "reasonable" magnifications the effects are either not >>noticeable or are swamped by other effects or are cancelled out by the >>effects of other algorithms, when the digital image is viewed or >>printed. > > > I don't agree. Of course aliasing will be reduced but this is just because > lenses act as lowpass filters. With high quality lenses there will still > be aliasing with 60MP. As I wrote last week, the two only methods are: not > using a lens "better than the sensor", or designing a sensor where there > is no gap between adjacent photosensitive elements (this will also act as > an analog lowpass filter). The computer graphist's antialiasing is just > digital (algorithmic) antialiasing and can't do anything to repair a > violation of Nyquist-Shannon's rule. > > >>On Thu, 01 Jul 2004 08:49:02 -0400, Dan C <bladman99@yahoo.ca> wrote: >> >>>The other article concerns the digital back for the R8/R9. They are >>>aiming for a December launch, but they seem to be having problems >>>getting the internal image processing software ready. Leica isn't >>>happy with it. > > > My own guess is that Leica people (who are great optical and mechanical > engineers but maybe not digital image processing specialists) are > discovering that digital image processing is hopeless if sampling was not > good enough. R lenses are so sharp that aliasing problems must be really > hard and digital sensors not up to the task. Again, non-adjacent > photosensitive elements are a real problem with good optics. There is no > aliasing trouble in the Espio at 400x640 pixels with a cheap plastic > single element lens! > > Jean > > ------------------------------------------------------------ > Dr Jean Louchet COMPLEX Project INRIA Rocquencourt > BP105 78153 Le Chesnay cedex, France > Jean.Louchet@inria.fr http://fractales.inria.fr/~louchet > ------------------------------------------------------------ > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information >