Jack Hogan
Veteran Member
Many high end prime lenses tend to correct for axial aberrations, bringing the blue plane in line with the green one, often leaving red relatively uncorrected and out of focus. Such lenses are sometimes referred to as apochromats.
However, human observers tend to be more sensitive to changes in luminance than in chrominance so when asked for a system MTF most software tends to produce results based on the Y channel, which for instance can be obtained from white balanced raw data (r, g, b) roughly as follows for the setup in the article at bottom
Y = 0.25r + g - 0.25b
This means that the spatial frequency response of the 3 individual raw color planes (MTFr, MTFg, MTFb) will be added in the same proportions to produce the system's MTF.
Wouldn't this suggest that for best perceived 'sharpness' from a lens we would want the red plane as sharp as green, if anything leaving the blue one relatively uncorrected instead, since we are adding the MTF of the former and subtracting the MTF of the latter?
Are there any lenses that do this? What do their images look like?
Why do most manufacturers prefer to do the opposite instead? Purple fringing?
Jack
See for instance here: https://www.strollswithmydog.com/combining-cfa-mtf50-ii/
However, human observers tend to be more sensitive to changes in luminance than in chrominance so when asked for a system MTF most software tends to produce results based on the Y channel, which for instance can be obtained from white balanced raw data (r, g, b) roughly as follows for the setup in the article at bottom
Y = 0.25r + g - 0.25b
This means that the spatial frequency response of the 3 individual raw color planes (MTFr, MTFg, MTFb) will be added in the same proportions to produce the system's MTF.
Wouldn't this suggest that for best perceived 'sharpness' from a lens we would want the red plane as sharp as green, if anything leaving the blue one relatively uncorrected instead, since we are adding the MTF of the former and subtracting the MTF of the latter?
Are there any lenses that do this? What do their images look like?
Why do most manufacturers prefer to do the opposite instead? Purple fringing?
Jack
See for instance here: https://www.strollswithmydog.com/combining-cfa-mtf50-ii/
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