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ISO Sensitivity / Noise levelsISO equivalence on a digital camera is the ability to increase the sensitivity of the sensor. This works by turning up the "volume" (gain) on the sensor's signal amplifiers (remember the sensor is an analogue device). By amplifying the signal you also amplify the noise which becomes more visible at higher ISO's. Many modern cameras also employ noise reduction and / or sharpness reduction at higher sensitivities.
Sony DSC-H5 vs Canon PowerShot S3 IS
With tiny, high pixel count chips noise is always going to be an issue, and to a large degree this is more a test of the effectiveness (both measurable and visible) of a camera's noise reduction system. Designers have to balance the desire to produce smooth, clean results with the need to retain as much detail as possible (if you blur away the noise, you blur away image detail too). These crops show clearly that Sony is using stronger noise reduction at higher ISO values (over ISO 200), but what is notable is that this results in cleaner results without losing significantly more detail than the Canon (especially if you do a little sharpening, and taking into account the extra resolution available in the first place). The ISO 200 result is remarkably good and the ISO 400 result is perfectly usable for smaller prints. ISO 800 is also just about usable for small prints, though the low noise comes at a price; the loss fine detail and some fairly obvious noise reduction artefacts. Sony DSC-H5 vs DSC-H2 High ISO compared (ISO 400-1000)
At higher ISO settings there is a small but measurable difference in both the amount and appearance of noise and the noise reduction used. At settings of ISO 200 and over the stronger noise reduction needed by the 7MP chip used in the H5 more or less removes any resolution advantage. At ISO 800 and 1000 the H5 produces smoother looking results but they are softer too - and if you change settings (or apply post-processing) to sharpen up the H5 result you will see even less difference between these two cameras. Luminance noise graphCameras compared:
Indicated ISO sensitivity is on the horizontal axis of this graph, standard deviation of luminosity is on the vertical axis. As usual what we're really looking at here isn't 'noise' as much as noise reduction; all three cameras produce similar results at lower ISO settings, but the Panasonic has much heavier noise reduction at higher settings. The graph also clearly shows that the H5 has considerably lower measurable noise than the Canon S3 IS, particularly at higher ISO values, thanks to heavier noise reduction. RGB noise graph
Indicated ISO sensitivity is on the horizontal axis of this graph, standard deviation of each of the red, green and blue channels is on the vertical axis. Like the H2 there is a fairly linear relationship between noise and ISO sensitivity, though at all but the highest ISO values the H5 has slightly higher noise. Sony DSC-H2 and DSC-H5 compared
Indicated ISO sensitivity is on the horizontal axis of this graph, standard deviation of each of the red, green and blue channels is on the vertical axis. |
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