1. Given two CoCs of an object, c caused by being out of focus, and d caused by diffraction, what is a simple, decent formula for their convolution?
By this question, I am asking for some simple-but-still-useful approximation. Sometimes I like to take pictures before I get the results of computer simulations. Is that why I like the object-field method so much?
For my original question, we are allowed to use the characteristics of of defocus blurs and diffraction to get our answer. I imagine we're all at least 99% sure that the answer is at least max(c,d) (because two spreads we didn't want don't usually offset each other) and at most c+d (a simple geometric argument corresponding the convolutions of circles).
I'm hoping for something that is reasonable to use in the field. I see no reason to give up on finding a useful answer in terms of c and d.
When c or d is 0, we know what to do and all three formulas I suggested give the same, correct answer.
Maybe we can focus on the c = d case. Maybe someone can simulate the c = d case. Too vague? OK, how about the c = d = 10 um case?
It looks like my question is striking this group as more that a little odd. I admit that my perspective is Jaynesian, as in reasoning from Bayesian methods, maximum entropy, and transformation groups. The attitude is summarized in a simple title for business "How to Measure Anything." One easy example of this approach is the Fermi decomposition. An approximate answer can be better than no answer.
Another example is, "Shall we open a store in Pittsburgh?" or "Shall I focus at infinity or 300 feet?" We want something to guide us right now even if our information is imperfect and a better answer is possible some day in the future.
It sounds like Jim is saying that my question involving c and d has such woefully limited information that no answer is possible, as if I asked "What is the CoC of a Canon lens?" with no other information. Can you at least agree that a reasonable answer is between max(c,d) and c+d?
Jim has discussed c often, including it in the title of this thread, but what I mean by d is perhaps unclear and undefined. Its not apples and oranges. By d, I am referring to the diameter of a blur caused by diffraction on an object that is in perfect focus measured in the visual units (it looks like) a blur caused by defocus of something photographed with essentially zero diffraction.
Jim, you're a classical guy. Maybe everyone in this thread is classical. I'm a Bayesian. Hope we can still learn from each other, or at least have a discussion.
In my modeling, I use different kernels for OOF and diffraction. One is an Airy solid, and the other is a pillbox. I compute the combined effect by successive convolutions.
Oh, I think I see what you mean. Have a look here:
http://www.cs.uu.nl/docs/vakken/ibv/reader/chapter5.pdf
Page down to 5.1.6
what you're talking about is this:
Distributive law: (g + h) ∗ f = g ∗ f + h ∗ f.
Right?
Not immediately clear to me.
Then you should probably read the whole chapter.
I was trying to answer your question, "Right?". I would have thought my issue has come up before, and indeed Image Clarity discusses this on p. 30 and chapters 4 and 5 at least. (By the way, the online PDF copies look dangerous to me. I am using my hard copy.)
The book offers an "image degradation" formula of sqrt(c^2+d^2), which falls between my reasonable limits above, so I'm inclined to use it if nothing more comes along. At least as a first approximation until someone shows me better.
I was hoping for a formula involving the two numbers I have, c and d. I'm not sure how that fits into a distributive law. Distributive laws have three letters. I want a formula involving two letters.
Can't be done, since the kernels are different in other ways than their sizes. Even if focus blur can be approximated with a pillbox kernel, diffraction blur can't.
No, "you can measure anything." It can be done, though not perfectly. If a clever person figures out how, it can take the strange aspects of diffraction blur into account, but until anyone offers some other way to do that, I'll use Image Clarity's image-degradation formula.
If no one suggests better, will assume that the composite CoC size is sqrt(c^2 + d^2), as in the book, Image Clarity. I want a formula that has a c in it and a d in it.
I often see, even from you, Jim, arguments with an implicit assumption (it seems to me) that the formula is max(c,d), but I don't think that is reliable or reasonable.
There is a passage in Merklinger's simpler book, "The Ins and Outs of Focus," that he considers c+d a reasonable approximation,
I don't. That's one of the reasons I'm running the sim.
I certainly look forward to the results of the sim. OK, you're sure that c+d is not always reasonable. Terrific. I like the concreteness of your statement. That's different from saying that c+d is meaningless. OK, are you saying that c+d too high or too low? What formula might be better?
and I know a simple geometrical argument that yields this result, but it ignores visibility thresholds (Yeah, I might be making up a term here).