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UV camera project build question

Started Sep 24, 2018 | Discussions thread
ProfHankD
ProfHankD Veteran Member • Posts: 9,147
Lots of issues...

petrochemist wrote:

You will need to be careful selecting your UV pass filter, all the old film era ones allow NIR through as well (which wasn't seen by film) Digital sensors are sensitive to NIR so the NIR will often swamp the detector. Only a few very expensive filters like the Baader U2, or carefully selected stacks of multiple filters will work acceptably.

The filter stacks may well prove to be too thick for placing on the sensor -the option I'm considering for UV needs at least 3mm thickness of BG38 glass together with a U330. That's a 5mm total filter thickness probably significantly more than the existing hot mirror (usually ~1.5mm thick).

If I'm understanding this correctly, the OP is talking about a mod to a Canon IXUS 105, which is a little old PowerShot supported by CHDK .

That means the lens is extremely hard to replace. I'd also be more than a little concerned that the sensor stack itself might block enough UV to make this problematic -- MaxMax claims the CFA and microlenses actually block UV . Incidentally, it is a CCD sensor in most PowerShots, not a CMOS one -- does that help or hurt?

Anyway, it really all depends on the wavelengths of interest, doesn't it? My understanding is that to about 365nm is doable with conventional optics, but shorter wavelengths require quartz optics and other extravagant things. It depends on what you want....

It's not really intended for UV nor for use with cameras, but you can get a theatrical gel filter color swatch book quite cheaply and each filter comes with its spectral profile. Take a look at Rosco's web site to see some profiles -- for example:

Combining two or three filters from a Rosco pack might get you close enough to what you want in UV sensitivity. For example, the above + #375 Cerulean Blue might not be a bad starting point, although you'll be down more than 2 stops around 400nm (and lower elsewhere). Of course, you'll probably need longish exposures and a bright UV light -- and bright UV lights are seriously dangerous.

In any case, good luck.

 ProfHankD's gear list:ProfHankD's gear list
Canon PowerShot SX530 Olympus TG-860 Sony a7R II Canon EOS 5D Mark IV Sony a6500 +32 more
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