The History of Image Formation The History of Image Formation
The History of Image Formation The History of Image Formation
The History of Image Formation The History of Image Formation
What is light
How the eye maps objects in the world to the
image that we perceive
2011-HT2
2011
HT2
Lecture A
I
Image
Formation
F
ti
Ancient Egypt
15th century
The Renaissance
Early investigations in perspective started
alreadyy byy the ancient Greeks ((~500 BC))
and Arab scientists (~1000 AD)
It was not until the 15th century that artists
began to use perspective as a basis for
their paintings
Parallel lines should meet at a single
g p
point
Brunelleschi (~1415)
Camera obscura
Camera obscura
From Diderots
Encyclopedia 1772
Camera obscura
Camera obscura
Th
The fifirstt photograph
h t
h was taken
t k by
b a smallll
camera obscura in 1826 by Nipce
8h exposure time!
Today
A camera obscura
at Melville Garden
in Massachusetts
around 1880
10
Laterna Magica
History of photography
11
Source: en.wikipedia.org
Basic physics
With energy
That propagate through space
c=
13
14
E
Energy depends
d
d on th
the ffrequency
Energy is preserved
c1
The
Th energy off a photon
h t is
i
1
E=h=hc/
h is Plancks constant ( 6.623 10-23 Js)
15
c2 and 2 must
change with the
same factor relative
to c1 and 1
c 2 < c1
1
2 = 1
2 < 1
If the speed
p
of light
g changes
g from one medium to
another,
the frequency is constant to make the energy constant
the
th wavelength
l
th mustt change
h
16
Spectrum
Spectrum
Less number
of photons
More number
of photons
E
Monochromatic light
17
18
Polarization
The
Th electromagnetic
l t
ti fifield
ld h
has a direction
di ti
Perpendicular to the direction of motion
20
Polarization
Polarization
Circular/elliptical
Ci l / lli ti l polarization
l i ti
Plane polarization
Electric field
21
Coherence
Radiometry
The
Th phase
h
off th
the lilight
ht waves can either
ith b
be
random: incoherent light (natural light)
in a systematic relation: coherent light
24
Radiometry
Radiometry
Radiometry
26
Basic principle
27
28
Light
source
Sensor
Light
source
Surface 2
Surface
Surface 1
29
Light
source 1
30
Surface 2
Sensor
Light
source 1
Surface 2
Light
source 2
Light
source 2
Medium
Surface 1
Surface 1
31
32
When
Wh light
li ht meets
t a surface
f
Some part of it is transmitted through the new media
Possibly
P
ibl with
ith another
th speed
d and
d di
direction
ti
33
34
Basic principle
Refraction
E0 = incoming energy
E3 = absorbed energy
sin 1
n1
c2
=
=
sin 2
n2
c1
E1 = transmitted energy
E2 = reflected energy
2
35
36
Absorption
Absorption
Th
The absorption
b
ti off light
li ht iin matter
tt depends
d
d on th
the length
l
th
that the light travels through the material
a = ex
a = attenuation of the light (0 a 1)
= the materials absorption
p
coefficient
x = length that the light travels in the material
37
38
Absorption spectrum
Reflection
s2()
( ) = s1()
( ) a()
( )
s1 = incident spectrum
s2 = reflected/transmitted
fl t d/t
itt d spectrum
t
a = absorption
p
spectrum
p
((0 a()
( ) 1))
Mirror
Lambertian surface
40
Emission
Scattering
In any
yp
possible direction
Different probability for different directions
Weak effect and roughly
g yp
proportional
p
to -4
In general, the probability depends also on the
distribution of particle sizes
41
42
Scattering
Scattering
Scattering is not an absorption
g ray
y does not travel
It rather means that the light
along a straight line through the medium
There is a p
probability
y that a certain p
photon exits the
medium in another direction than it entered.
Examples:
p
The sky is blue because of scattering of the sun light
A strong
g laser beam becomes visible in air
Medium
43
44
n
x
45
A light camera
46
Pinhole-camera
Orthographic camera
Push-broom camera
Light-field
Light field camera
47
48
The aperture
through which all
light enters the
camera
M
Mathematically
th
ti ll we need
d only
l kknow th
the
location of the image plane and the
aperture
The rest is physics + practical implementation
In fact, it suffices to know the aperture (why?)
This is where we
measure the image
In the literature
literature, the aperture point is also
called
For an ideal
F
id l
pinhole camera
the aperture is a
single point
camera center
camera focal point
The camera
ffrontt
49
Q ( 1,y2) is
Q=(y
i
the projection
of P
50
P=(x1,x2,x3) is
a point in 3D
space
The (x1,x
x2) plane is the principal plane or
focal plane
The green line is the projection line of
point P
All points on the line are projected onto Q
Alternatively:
Alt
ti l th
the projection
j ti liline off Q
52
Two similar
triangles give:
y1
x1
=
f
x3
or
y1
x1
= xf
3 x2
y2
y1 = fxx1
3
53
54
Cannot
C
t be
b realized
li d iin practice
ti
Produces the same image as the rotated
image from the real image plane
Easier to draw?
55
56
Lenses vs
vs. infinitesimal aperture
Th
The pinhole
i h l camera model
d ld
doesnt
t work
k iin
practice since
P=
A point in 3D
space
O=
The camera
focal point
y1
x1
= xf
3 x2
y2
57
Thin lenses
Th
The object
bj t plane
l
consist
i t off allll points
i t th
thatt appear
sharp when projected through the lens onto the
image plane
The object plane is an ideal model of where the
sharp
sharp points
points are located
image
g
plane
a
58
object
plane
59
Thin lenses
1+1 = 1
a
b
fL
To change a (distance to object plane), we
need to change
g b since f is constant
61
a = for b = fL !
63
64
Resulting wave-function
65
66
lens diameter
camera front
focal plane
image plane
light wavelength
67
68
Conclusions:
C
l i
The image cannot have a better resolution
than x
No need to measure the image with higher
resolution than x !
The
Th Airy
Ai disk
di k iis also
l called
ll d point
i t spread
d ffunction
ti
or blur disk, circle of confusion
Be aware
a are of cameras with
ith high pi
pixel
el
resolution and high diffraction
Depth of field
70
Depth of field
We
W have
h
now placed
l
d a llens att th
the aperture
t
Points that are off the object plane become
blurred proportional to the displacement from
the object plane
F
For a camera where
h
a < , an
approximation (assuming d << a) for d is
L)
d 2 x a(af
Df
a = distance
di t
ffrom lens
l
tto object
bj t plane
l
fL = lens focal length
D = lens diameter
x = required
q
image
g p
plane resolution
d = depth of field
72
Depth of field
The F-number
F number
fL/D iis th
the F-number
F
b off the
th lens
l
or llens system
t
Example
A typical F number of a camera = 8
Blue light = 420 nm wavelength
Airy disk diameter x = 1.22 F 4 m
fL D
dmin
i = 4 x
73
74
Lens distortion
This is the focal length of the pinhole camera, had there not
been a lens. Same as the pin-hole camera focal length f
76
Lens distortion
No distortion
y2
y1
Pincushion distortion
Lens distortion
Whi
Which
h di
distortion
t ti ffunction
ti h is
i used
d
depends on the type of lens and other
practical considerations:
78
79
Number of parameters
Invertibility
Vignetting
Vignetting
81
Mechanical vignetting
82
84
Chromatic aberration
85
Chromatic aberration
87