Steve Deutsch
Leading Member
Remember, they are turning on NR and if you look at Phil's samples in the review, you'll see clean 'gray' but fairly 'soft' edges in the queen.
I think the 7-8 um is the current sweet spot of pixel pitch.
I think the 7-8 um is the current sweet spot of pixel pitch.
It is clear (to my understanding of the subject) that
signal-to-noise ratio decreases as sensor pixel pitch decreases.
Although there are those on these fora who seem to think this is
not a significant issue. The bulk of this noise on higher end
cameras comes from photon (shot) noise, which you don't really
cover in your essay.
Measurements by Roger Clark suggest that in the 1DII at least, SNR
is pretty close to the theoretical limit imposed by photon noise:
http://clarkvision.com/imagedetail/does.pixel.size.matter/
There is little room for futher improvement in the hardware in
terms of signal to noise ratio. Smaller pixels mean more noise, and
although there are ways to attempt to improve this using
processing, what can be achieved seems to be limited. This is what
we see in the digital compacts.
The best of the current crop of compacts for noise would seem to be
the Fuji F10, which seems pretty good by comparison to other
compacts, but of course nowhere near what is produced by the DSLRs.
The F10 has a pixel pitch of approx 2.5 microns.
Of the current DSLRs, the 1DII (and 5D) have a pitch of 8.2
microns. 20D = 6.4, D2X = 5.5 and E300 = 5.6.
The question is how small pixel pitch can become and still produce
good signal to noise ratio (of a quality consistent with that
expected of DSLRs rather than comsumer compact).
For full frame sensors, this is not too much of a problem (1DsII
pitch is 7.2 microns giving a 17MP sensor). 13MP on an APS-C sized
sensor requires a pixel pitch of approx. 5 microns. A 4/3 sensor
with 13MP requires a pixel pitch of 4.3 microns. Nikon have
demonstrated that it is possible to have good noise control at 5.5
microns. the question is will it be possible at 4.3? this obviosuly
remains to be seen.
As I understand it, there are some possible improvements in sensor
design that could improve noise for a given pixel pitch, because
with current designs only part of the "available" area of each
pixel is used for the light sesing component, the rest being taken
up by processing components. It seems clear that new sensor designs
will be required to take resolutions above the 12MP mark,
particularly for APS-C and four thirds sensors and anything smaller.