Jack Kelly
November 15th, 2008, 09:35 AM
Hello,
I'm not sure where is best to ask this question but I figured that the Cineform forum would be a good choice because Cineform clearly know an awful lot about bayer sensors!
Is it theoretically possible to downsample a RAW image without demosaicing? For example, if you had a 10megapixel bayer sensor then would it be possible to downsample in-camera to produce, say, a 5megapixel RAW bayer signal?
Or can downsampling only be accomplished *after* demosaicing and hence the pixel dimensions of a camera's RAW output always has to be exactly the same as the sensor's pixel dimensions?
The reason I ask is because this question has popped up a number of times in the recent discussions about RED's latest offerings and about the possibility of seeing a low-cost, high-performance movie mode in a dSLR some time soon. Lots of people want a single camera which performs well as both a stills camera and as a movie camera recording compressed RAW. The problem is that stills cameras have huge pixel dimensions (10-20Mpixels) and it seems a little uneconomical to try to capture such huge frame sizes for most movie applications, especially when recording to off-the-shelf flash media. But, on the other hand, it would be nice to record a RAW movie format. Hence the question: is it possible to downsample a bayer image without demosaicing?
Is the best compromise to capture the entire bayer image but use relatively aggressive wavelet compression to get the bitrate down?
Many thanks,
Jack
I'm not sure where is best to ask this question but I figured that the Cineform forum would be a good choice because Cineform clearly know an awful lot about bayer sensors!
Is it theoretically possible to downsample a RAW image without demosaicing? For example, if you had a 10megapixel bayer sensor then would it be possible to downsample in-camera to produce, say, a 5megapixel RAW bayer signal?
Or can downsampling only be accomplished *after* demosaicing and hence the pixel dimensions of a camera's RAW output always has to be exactly the same as the sensor's pixel dimensions?
The reason I ask is because this question has popped up a number of times in the recent discussions about RED's latest offerings and about the possibility of seeing a low-cost, high-performance movie mode in a dSLR some time soon. Lots of people want a single camera which performs well as both a stills camera and as a movie camera recording compressed RAW. The problem is that stills cameras have huge pixel dimensions (10-20Mpixels) and it seems a little uneconomical to try to capture such huge frame sizes for most movie applications, especially when recording to off-the-shelf flash media. But, on the other hand, it would be nice to record a RAW movie format. Hence the question: is it possible to downsample a bayer image without demosaicing?
Is the best compromise to capture the entire bayer image but use relatively aggressive wavelet compression to get the bitrate down?
Many thanks,
Jack