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Ultra-high-contrast digital sensing technique could put an end to “blown out” skies

The image sensor of a digital camera does not directly capture digital data. Instead, it captures light signal as analog data and then uses an analog-to-digital converter (ADC) to convert the fluctuating voltages of the light analog signals into digital strings of ones and zeroes. If an incoming signal exceeds the voltage limit of the ADC, the ADC will cut it off (i.e., flatlines at the maximum voltage). This phenomenon is familiar as “saturation” in digital images — when, for instance, a sky that looks blue to the naked eye is captured by your camera as white; we then say that the sky has overexposed or “blown out.”

There are a number of tricks you can use to avoid blown-out skies — and thus capture back that blue sky:

In the future, we may not need to do any of these adjustments anymore. Researchers from MIT and the Technical University of Munich have put forward a technique that they call “Unlimited Sampling” which, theoretically, can accurately digitize signals whose voltage peaks are far beyond an ADC’s voltage limit. The consequence could be cameras that capture all the gradations of color visible to the human eye (as well as audio that doesn’t skip, and medical and environmental sensors that can handle both long periods of low activity and the sudden signal spikes that are often the events of interest). Maybe, one day we will really realize the promise Kodak made to us a long time ago (with a slight twist): “You Press the Button, [the Camera Does] the Rest.

If you want to know the details about this promising technique, read more about Ultra-high-contrast digital sensing.

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