Interceptor121
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Yes the measurements involves the whole system so to say that it exceed or not is arbitraryAliasing is a sensor issue, not a lens issue.MTF measurement has its own challenges aliasing for me doesnt mean it resolves itI guess it depends on what you mean by 'resolving the Nyquist limit', I don't know if I would use the system MTF50 frequency as a gauge for that.
Even so, a system with MTF50 beyond 0.5 c/p would show horrible aliasing and would not be desirable imho - that's why there used to be AA filters and I wish there still were. Perhaps better ones, like Canon's Hi-Res .
One of my biggest complaints about the Z7 above is aliasing: paraphrasing Jim K, at first you don't notice it and your life is bliss; but once you start seeing it, it becomes hard to ignore and soon you see it everywhere. In a natural scene it may present like an oversharpened image, though with no sharpening applied.
Jack
Yes that is an arbitrary measurementWhich limit? Nyquist is 0.5 cy/px and aliasing of colour detail occurs at 0.25 cy/px.your sample though was under the limit
Do you mean MTF50? That's an entirely arbitrary measurement. The normal 'limit' of visible detail is usually regarded as MTF10, but this too is rather ambiguous.
When I say does it matter I meant there is an improvement of image quality that this means resolution or something else it does not matter as long as it is an improvement, which it is
