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Encyclopedia > Foveon X3 sensor

The Foveon X3 sensor is an image sensor for digital cameras produced by Foveon, Inc. It is a layered sensor design, in which each location in a grid has layered photosensors sensitive to all three primary colors, in contrast to the mosaic Bayer filter sensor design commonly used in digital camera sensors where each location is a single photosensor (pixel) sensitive to only one primary color. Hello--80. ... A SiPix digital camera next to a matchbox to show scale. ... Foveon, Inc. ... The Bayer filter mosaic. ... A pixel (pix, 1932 abbreviation of pictures, coined by Variety headline writers + element) is one of the many tiny dots that make up the representation of a picture in a computers memory. ...


As of 2005, the Foveon X3 sensor is only used in the Sigma SD9 and SD10 digital SLR cameras and the Polaroid x530 compact digital camera. 2005 is a common year starting on Saturday of the Gregorian calendar. ... Sigma Corporation ) is a Japanese company manufacturing cameras, lenses, flashes and other photographic accessories. ... The Sigma SD10 is a digital SLR camera produced by the Sigma Corporation of Japan. ... The single-lens reflex (SLR) is a type of camera that uses a movable mirror placed between the lens and the film to project the image seen through the lens to a matte focusing screen. ... The Polaroid Corporation was founded in 1937 by Edwin H. Land. ...


The Foveon X3 sensor is difficult to classify by megapixel count compared to mosaic sensor cameras, in which the location count and photosensor count are the same. The Foveon X3 sensor has three times as many photosensors as grid locations, since each location has photosensors for all three primary colors. Comparing sensors by number of locations underestimates the resolution of the Foveon X3 sensor, since no de-mosaicing interpolation is required to achieve full color information at each location. On the other hand, comparison by photosensor count over-states the resolution in comparison to a Bayer sensor. Independent comparisons of quality tend to rate the Foveon X3 sensor as having resolution equivalent to a Bayer sensor of double the location count, consistent with equal numbers of locations dedicated to luminance resolution (that is, green-sensitive photosensors). A pixel (a contraction of picture element) is one of the many tiny dots that make up the representation of a picture in a computers memory. ...


Since demosaicing is not required to produce a full-color image, the color artifacts ("colored jaggies") associated with that process are not seen. Thus, the image-softening anti-aliasing required to mitigate those artifacts is not required. This in turn means that the sharpening filter which most cameras apply to the image is not necessary with the Foveon X3 sensor. In digital signal processing, anti-aliasing is the technique of minimizing aliasing (jagged or blocky patterns) when representing a high-resolution signal at a lower resolution. ...


Another Foveon advantage is that more of the photons entering the camera will be detected by a photosensor (almost all of the photons rather than near one-third of them will be sensed). Each pixel of a mosaic sensor is covered by a light filter that passes only one of the primary colors, absorbing the other two. Absorbing the light destroys information about that pixel, making the image fuzzier and grainier. The Foveon's advantage is offset by the matrixing required to reconstruct color information from the sensed raw data, which reportedly results in a Foveon sensor with large photosites being unable to equal the low light performance of more conventional sensors with half the photosite area. A primary color or colour is a color that cannot be created by mixing other colors in the gamut of a given color space. ...


The question of whether to count each location (each stack of three photosensors) as a pixel, versus counting each individual single-color photosensor as a pixel as is done in Bayer-mosaic sensors, has been a point of controversy for Foveon X3 sensors and for the specifications of cameras that use them. For example, the Sigma SD10, which produces a native RAW file size of 3.4 Million RGB pixels, is advertised as a 10.2 MP camera, sometimes with the clarification 3.4 MP Red + 3.4 MP Green + 3.4 MP Blue; an 8 MP Bayer-mosaic camera would similarly be clarified to be 2 MP Red + 4 MP Green + 2 MP Blue.


Since the depth of all three color sensing layers in the silicon crystal of the Foveon X3 sensor is only about three micrometres, the depth dimension has negligible effect on focusing or chromatic aberration. Since the collection depth of the deepest (red) sensor layer is comparable to collection depths in other silicon CMOS and CCD sensors, it does allow some diffusion of electrons and loss of sharpness in the longer wavelengths. Chromatic aberration is caused by the dispersion of the lens material, the variation of its refractive index n with the wavelength of light. ...


The development of the Foveon X3 technology is the subject of a 2005 book The Silicon Eye by George Gilder. George Gilder (born 1939, in New York City) is a libertarian, right-wing, American philosopher, futurologist, and author. ...


External links

  • Foveon X3 technology page
  • Foveon X3 Pixel Page
  • DPReview Foveon X3 prototype preview
  • Foveon user community
  • Foveon/Sigma support/info site
  • Sample Sigma/Foveon photos
  • Sample Polaroid x530/Foveon photos

  Results from FactBites:
 
Foveon's revolutionary X3 sensor: Digital Photography Review (1720 words)
Foveon X3 pixels maximize the use of light since all three colors are collected at each pixel.
Foveon X3 image sensors are the world’s only image sensors that capture color images by taking advantage of the natural color-separating properties of silicon.
Foveon is the first and only company to use silicon color separation as a foundation for the design of color image sensors for digital cameras.
Foveon - Direct Image Sensors (473 words)
A direct image sensor is an image sensor that directly captures red, green, and blue light at each point in an image during a single exposure.
Foveon pioneered the development of the direct image sensor using the most advanced developments in semiconductor design, image processing, and signal processing.
This was due to the fact that CCD digital image sensors were only capable of recording just one color at each point in the captured image instead of the full range of colors at each location.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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