
ISO Sensitivity / Noise levels
ISO equivalence on a digital camera is the ability to increase
the sensitivity of the sensor to enable faster shutter speeds and/or better
performance in low light. The way this works in a digital camera is by
"turning up the volume" on the sensor's signal amplifiers. Nothing
is without its price however and doing so also amplifies noise and can
also affect color saturation and hue.
The
Sigma SD9 has three selectable sensitivities of ISO 100, 200 and 400.
Our noise comparison test involves shooting a colour patch chart (a GretagMacBeth
ColorChecker) at the full range of ISO sensitivities and then measuring
luminance and RGB noise at a 'mid' grey patch.
Note that this is a modification to our previous noise test which only
measured luminance noise. The new test now provides a graph of luminance
noise for each selectable sensitivity as well as individual RGB channel
noise.
Sigma SD9 vs. Canon EOS-D60
Camera settings:
- Sigma SD9: manual exposure, High resolution, Shade WB, Sigma 50 mm
F2.8 lens
- Canon EOS-D60: manual exposure, Default params, Cloudy WB, RAW, Sigma
50 mm F2.8 lens
Raw converter settings:
- Sigma Photo Pro v1.0: default processing, output 8-bit TIFF (sRGB)
- Canon File Viewer Utility: default settings, output 8-bit TIFF (sRGB)
Measurements taken at approximately 21°C (~70°F). Lighting was
daylight. Crops below taken directly from TIFF files.
| |
ISO 100 |
ISO 100 |
Sigma SD9
1/6 sec, F5.6 |
Canon EOS-D60
1/5 sec, F5.6 |
| Original
crop |
 |
| Red
channel |
| Green
channel |
| Blue
channel |
| |
| |
ISO 200 |
ISO 200 |
Sigma SD9
1/10 sec, F5.6 |
Canon EOS-D60
1/10 sec, F5.6 |
| Original
crop |
 |
| Red
channel |
| Green
channel |
| Blue
channel |
| |
| |
ISO 400 |
ISO 400 |
Sigma SD9
1/20 sec, F5.6 |
Canon EOS-D60
1/20 sec, F5.6 |
| Original
crop |
 |
| Red
channel |
| Green
channel |
| Blue
channel |
As you can see noise levels are really quite similar, the most notable
difference is that the SD9's noise is spread fairly equally throughout
the color channels (as we would expect) where as the EOS-D60's noise is
more visible in the red channel. The other thing which isn't immediately
visible is the fact that the SD9's noise has a finer 'grain' to it, that's
because each individual pixel can be affected by noise without necessarily
affecting its neighbour, unlike with a mosaic sensor.
Luminance noise graph

Note that ISO sensitivity is on the horizontal axis of this graph.
As noted above noise levels are fairly close and follow roughly the same
line of increment.
RGB noise graph

Note that ISO sensitivity is on the vertical axis of this graph.
As we noted above the SD9's noise is fairly equally balanced between each
color channel, unlike a mosaic sensor which tends to have noisier red
or blue channels.

Red hue noise
UPDATE May 2003: Today Sigma / Foveon posted a new version of the PhotoPro
RAW conversion software, this appears to have vastly improved noise reduction
/ image output algorithms which have significantly reduced any specific
noise in red hues. You can read my comparison of the old and new PhotoPro
software by clicking
here.
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