IR Photography

Oct 13, 2008 10:55

I tried out some IR photography this weekend (after a post on UV photography by txtriffidranch the other day). In the sequences below the cut, I have three images: normal visible light (technically, representative false color), a black and white version of the visible light image, and an IR black and white version. (I used an IR filter which blocked out all ( Read more... )

Leave a comment

Comments 10

framefolly October 13 2008, 17:45:58 UTC
Wow! Really startling changes -- and continuities! The second set, with the trees and sky, is particularly striking. Beautiful pictures!

Reply

zandperl October 13 2008, 17:55:48 UTC
One thing that really surprised me was the difficulty focusing the IR images. Firstly, the autofocus didn't work quite right - since IR light bends a different amount when passing through glass than visible light, the process the camera uses for visible light apparently doesn't work as well for IR light. The second problem was that when you block out all the visible light, the image gets much dimmer, so where the normal light images were taken at 1/200 of a second, the IR light ones were more like 1/2.5 sec, and at those lengths you start getting blurring from shaking the camera.

Reply


seekingferret October 13 2008, 19:41:21 UTC
I exploited CCD sensitivity to near IR at work, to track a 1060nm laser beam whose spot was invisible to the naked eye. It came out purple on the camera's LCD screen and in photographs taken with the camera, for reasons I cannot explain. (This was not using an IR filter, because we also wanted to see the surroundings)

Reply

zandperl October 13 2008, 20:06:07 UTC
I guess that means that both the red and blue sensitive pixels are also sensitive in IR. I'm a bit surprised.

FWIW it's my understanding that commercially available digicams generally don't use CCD technology, but CMOS. I'm not too clear about the distinction between the two, though I'm under the impression that until recently CCDs were preferred for astronomical use. I'm planning to grill a couple astronomer friends of mine about it, but if you know more than Wikipedia says I'd love to hear.

Reply


rubicat October 13 2008, 20:24:10 UTC
IR photography is fascinating. Of course, light itself is fascinating! :)

Reply

zandperl October 13 2008, 21:06:15 UTC
Birds have 4 types of color-sensing cells (cones) in their eyes: RGB and UV! I want a UV-only filter now! :)

Reply

marquiswildbill October 13 2008, 22:55:19 UTC
How far into the UV can birds see?
I'm quite intrigued because UV has enough energy to break a number of chemical bonds, so anything that is not near the visible light region would blind the viewer.

Reply

zandperl October 13 2008, 23:48:57 UTC
Now that I don't know, but I'm sure you can find papers on it. :) Let me know if you do look for it.

Reply


Leave a comment

Up