Digital photography - How it
work
Digital cameras and
traditional cameras both have a lens to focus the
image, a shutter to allow light inside the camera, and an
aperture to control the amount of light which enters the
camera.
The differences between
digital photography and traditional photography occur
after the light enters the camera. A traditional camera
captures the images on film, while a digital camera
captures the image on an image sensor.
Image sensors are electronic
devices made up of an array of electrodes (or photosites)
which measure light intensity. The most common type of
image sensor for digital cameras is the CCD
(Charge-Coupled Device) although others such as CMOS and
Foveon are sometimes used.
The number of photosites in
the image sensor gives the digital camera its megapixel
(millions of pixels) rating. Each photosite corresponds
to a pixel in the final image, so a camera which is rated
at six megapixels, for example, has an image sensor which
is 3008 pixels wide by 2000 pixels high.
When light hits the image
sensor it is converted into electrical signals which are
amplified and fed to an analog-to-digital (A/D)
converter. The A/D converter changes the electrical
signal into binary numbers which are processed by a
computer housed in the camera body. Once the numbers have
been processed the resulting image is stored on a memory
card.
Photosites can only measure
intensity of light -- not colour. In order to produce a
colour image, each photosite must be covered with a
coloured filter which can be red, blue, or green. These
are the three primary colours which can be combined to
produce any other colour including white.
The coloured filters are
arranged in a grid so that there are twice as many green
filters as there are red or blue. This is because the
human eye is twice as sensitive to green light. Filters
are arranged in a pattern called the Bayer pattern - one
row of red, green, red, green (etc.), and the next row of
blue, green, blue, green (etc).
Since each photosite can only
be covered with one coloured filter, computer processing
is necessary to produce a full coloured image. This is
done by analyzing each individual pixel and its immediate
neighbors and producing a composite colour from these
calculations. For example, if a bright red pixel is
surrounded by bright green and bright blue pixels, the
bright red pixel must actually be white, because white is
the combination of red, blue, and green. This process is
called demosaicing.
After demosaicing the image is
adjusted according to the settings on your camera. Most
cameras have settings for brightness, contrast, and
colour saturation. After these adjustments are made some
cameras may also apply a sharpening algorithm to make the
image clearer.
The final step before saving
the image on the memory card is to compress it. Most
cameras use JPEG as a compression format. This reduces
the size of the file by eliminating excess data. This
data cannot be recovered, so JPEG is called a 'lossy'
format.
Many cameras have the ability
to save uncompressed images as TIFF files or raw data.
Raw data is the original photosite data even before
demosaicing. It can be transferred to a computer for
processing with special software that will perform all of
the processing functions of the camera but with much
greater control.
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