Carlos Molina
January 30th, 2011, 09:45 AM
A Sony official brochure about the coming PMW F3 has just been released.
http://www.matrixvideo.ca/pdf_folder...3-BROCHURE.pdf
I was surpriced when I read that the F3 sensor has an 'effective' resolution of 3.36 megapixels. I wonder what is the meaning of effective resolution...I am assuming that it refers to the number of photosites on the sensor.
I remember people speculating that the sensor should be around 3.5K. This horizontal photosites count resolution should translates in a total count near 7 megapixel (3.5x2) for the total sensor. But the number of 3.36 megapixel in the brochure is way below that. What's going on here?
I understand that the strategy, when you are delivering HD output and you are using a single Bayer sensor, is oversampling the horizontal photosite resolution to more than the desired output of 1080 (2K). This to prevent aliasing and avoiding chroma subsampling. It seems that a good sweet spot to achieve this is near 4K (the number is 3.5K in the case of the Alexa I believe).
By having 4K horizontal photosites you can assign 2K photosites to green, 1K to the blue, and 1K to the red. This will allow you to produce an image with a resolution of about 1K TV line pairs horizontal (TV/ph) on the green channel without aliasing (since you need at least two pixels to capture 1 TV line pair, which is one cycle, we get 1/2*(2K green channel)=1K TV/ph). Also, this horizontal oversampling near the number 4K leaves 1K for each chroma (B and R), minimizing the potential aliasing on those channels too.
So if the F3 sensor has only 3.36 megapixels instead of a number like, say 7 megapixels (which is what I was expecting) how can it delivers an image of 1000 TV/ph without aliasing (and without chroma subsampling since we know the sensor can delivers uncompressed 4:4:4)?
I would expect that a Bayer sensor that resolves around 1000 TVL/ph (which is about the limit for a 1920x1080 camcorder) should contain something near 3.5K horizontal resolution, which is about 7 megapixel photosites. But 3.36 megapixels is half that amount. Maybe the mismatch comes from the fact that I am equating effective resolution with sensor resolution, when they may refer to different things. Could someone explain to me what 'effective resolution' means?
http://www.matrixvideo.ca/pdf_folder...3-BROCHURE.pdf
I was surpriced when I read that the F3 sensor has an 'effective' resolution of 3.36 megapixels. I wonder what is the meaning of effective resolution...I am assuming that it refers to the number of photosites on the sensor.
I remember people speculating that the sensor should be around 3.5K. This horizontal photosites count resolution should translates in a total count near 7 megapixel (3.5x2) for the total sensor. But the number of 3.36 megapixel in the brochure is way below that. What's going on here?
I understand that the strategy, when you are delivering HD output and you are using a single Bayer sensor, is oversampling the horizontal photosite resolution to more than the desired output of 1080 (2K). This to prevent aliasing and avoiding chroma subsampling. It seems that a good sweet spot to achieve this is near 4K (the number is 3.5K in the case of the Alexa I believe).
By having 4K horizontal photosites you can assign 2K photosites to green, 1K to the blue, and 1K to the red. This will allow you to produce an image with a resolution of about 1K TV line pairs horizontal (TV/ph) on the green channel without aliasing (since you need at least two pixels to capture 1 TV line pair, which is one cycle, we get 1/2*(2K green channel)=1K TV/ph). Also, this horizontal oversampling near the number 4K leaves 1K for each chroma (B and R), minimizing the potential aliasing on those channels too.
So if the F3 sensor has only 3.36 megapixels instead of a number like, say 7 megapixels (which is what I was expecting) how can it delivers an image of 1000 TV/ph without aliasing (and without chroma subsampling since we know the sensor can delivers uncompressed 4:4:4)?
I would expect that a Bayer sensor that resolves around 1000 TVL/ph (which is about the limit for a 1920x1080 camcorder) should contain something near 3.5K horizontal resolution, which is about 7 megapixel photosites. But 3.36 megapixels is half that amount. Maybe the mismatch comes from the fact that I am equating effective resolution with sensor resolution, when they may refer to different things. Could someone explain to me what 'effective resolution' means?