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Photographing The Invisible. Using Invisible Light. Keene State College. Rich Blatchly. Digital Sensors. Sensors are opaque, and are designed to detect only one color. Sensors are grouped (blue, red, and 2 greens). Each pixel yields a full spectrum, but two colors are interpolated.
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PhotographingTheInvisible • Using Invisible Light
Keene State College • Rich Blatchly
Digital Sensors • Sensors are opaque, and are designed to detect only one color. • Sensors are grouped (blue, red, and 2 greens). • Each pixel yields a full spectrum, but two colors are interpolated.
Digital Infrared Photography • Note that silicon (basis for photosensors) is sensitive to IR. http://www.luminous-landscape.com/reviews/cameras/infrared%20dslr.shtml
Diagram of Apparatus • IR requires a source (sun?), a filter and an IR sensitive camera
Camera equipment • Testing your camera
Filter Responses • The common Wratten 89B is also called Hoya R72 http://wrotniak.net/photo/infrared/index.html#FILTER
Aren’t Filters Expensive? • Find a bottle cap that fits over your P&S camera lens • A piece of unexposed, processed slide film can be a filter. http://www.instructables.com/id/EMW6NFO0FPEQHO9ZGG/
Taking the picture • Exposure • In many cases, built in is OK • Try underexposing the photo to avoid red channel overload. • With 0.1% of light, exposure changes by 10 “stops”. (Each stop is x2 in exposure; 210 = 1024). • Focus
Processing http://wrotniak.net/photo/infrared/c5060.html
Mixed with Visible http://www.rbfotografia.com.br/Bruna/natureza/content/B6_large.html
http://farm1.static.flickr.com/61/154130385_c0694b74f6_b.jpg
How do leaves reflect IR? http://pirlwww.lpl.arizona.edu/research/biosphere/Lesson/
Reflection depends on Health of Leaf • Chlorophyll absorbs red and blue light and reflects green light. • Near-infrared light is reflected by the spongy cell structure inside of leaves. • Chlorotic (yellow) leaves have lower levels of chlorophyll • Necrotic leaves do not have pigments or the spongy cell structure of living leaves.
Other structural color • Leaves may appear lighter (gray, silver, white, blue, copper, or gold, due primarily to structures formed on the leaf surface that increase reflectance Turtleback, Psathyrotes ramosissima (Family Asteraceae),
Desert Brittlebush • These leaves reflect about 60% of solar radiation, thus reducing leaf heating and stress. Encelia farinosa (Family Asteraceae)
Forensic Uses of IR • Differences in ink can be detected in altered checks http://www.neiai.org/index.php?option=com_docman&task=doc_download&gid=28&Itemid=54
Absorption Spectra of Inks http://www.fbi.gov/hq/lab/fsc/backissu/oct1999/mokrzyck.htm
Forensic Uses of IR • Writing on charred paper can be imaged http://www.neiai.org/index.php?option=com_docman&task=doc_download&gid=28&Itemid=54
Bloodstains • Just as inks can be transparent in IR, fabric dyes can reflect, revealing blood patterns. http://www.neiai.org/index.php?option=com_docman&task=doc_download&gid=28&Itemid=54
More Bloodstains • Where is the real crime?
Infrared Fluorescence • Infrared Fluorescence is similar to UV/Vis fluorescence, but shifted in frequency/wavelength. http://people.rit.edu/andpph/text-infrared-luminescence.html
The Photophysics http://www.beyondvisible.com/BV0-Barebasics.html
Wood in IR Fluorescence • Wood is typically dark in IR, but pigments can absorb visible light and emit in the IR.
Camera Obscura • First reported in the 11th century by Al-Hazen of Egypt. • Arabic “quamera” or dark,gives us camera. • Used by artists and scientists • Some examples still survive (this is in San Francisco). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camera_obscura
Lenses • Simple lenses have problems • Long working distances • Color errors • Weight • Reflections (internal and external) • Complex lenses with coatings used http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/primer/java/lenses/simplethinlens/index.html http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/primer/java/lenses/magnify/index.html http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/primer/java/microscopy/variablelens/index.html
Complex lenses • Modern lenses use multiple elements with coating, different refractive indices and the ability to move as groups or alone while focussing and zooming. • Phew! http://www.opticalres.com/kidoptx.html#Lenses
Aperture and Shutter • These control exposure • Wider aperture increases light, decreases depth-of-field. • Slower shutter increases light, increases potential blur.
Understanding f-stops • Longer focal-length lenses (telephoto) collect less light than shorter lenses (wide-angle). f-stops help us correct for this. • The aperture size is divided into the focal length to give the f-number • For a 50 mm lens, a 25 mm aperture is half the focal length, therefore f/2. • Apertures are arranged in factors of the square root of 2 (1.4, 2, 2.8, 4, 5.6, 8, etc.), yielding 1/2 the light for each stop.