Kodak Unveils 50MP CCD Image Sensor
i4u writes in to let us know that Kodak has announced the world's first 50 million pixel CCD image sensor for professional photography (i.e., for medium-format cameras). Engineering-grade devices of the CCD, the KAF-50100, are currently available. Kodak plans to enter volume production in Q4 2008. "At 50 megapixels, the sensor captures digital images with unprecedented resolution and detail. For instance, with a 50 megapixel camera, in an aerial photo of a field 1.5 miles [about 2.5 km] across, you could detect an object about the size of a small notebook computer (1 foot by 1 foot)." Here's CNet's Crave blog with a few more technical details.
H3DII-50 has had 50 megapixel backends for quite some time..?
Is it unprecedented because it's now available at a cheaper price or something?
This is pretty much useless without really expensive lenses, so don't expect to see it in any consumer-level cameras.
The cake is a pie
The article doesn't seem to mention whether the new Kodak sensor uses the new-and-perhaps-improved pixel pattern that Kodak announced in 2007. See http://johncompton.pluggedin.kodak.com/default.asp?item=624876
Happily this sort of development drives down prices on consumer grade products over time. I wonder how this compares to scanning low iso medium format film on a drum scanner.
http://www.luminous-landscape.com/reviews/shootout.shtml
Is a good example of such a comparison, though I've seen differing results with older digital cameras.
.... but, you could spot the pimple on the Pron star's ass from 1000 feet away without using a zoom lens.
Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
Thanks for the insight, Dr. Obvious, BS, Ms,Ph. D.
"Digital cameras will never need more than 50 mega pixels."
I mean really I have a 6mpix camera and have never been lacking for resolution. It's got a 12x optical zoom (powershot s3 is) so I don't need resolution to make up for magnification either.
I wonder how big the market is for people that really NEED that much resolution?
And I wonder how many people's computers will absolutely CRY when trying to open a 50mpix tiff. My 6mpix jpegs are 2.5-3.5mb. (the tiffs are 15-16mb iirc) at 50mpix, 29mb would make for a terribly large and unwieldy jpeg.
But then there will be those that just want the biggest there is. And I need someone to drive the SD card prices down for me, so go for it.
I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
Currently top of the line 35mm sensors (half the area of Kodak's sensor) are 20 megapixels, and Sony is preparing to launch a 24 megapixel 35mm camera this fall. In terms of pixel density, Kodak haven't done anything special.
Canon has stated that they've made prototype 50 megapixel 35mm sensors, but that the market won't bear the cost right now.
Bing! Right on the heels of Hasselblad announcing their new H3DII-50 camera (to be released in October) which presumably uses this sensor. Hasselblad has also announced a future 645 format sensor (roughly 56mm x 45mm), more details to be revealed at Photokina 2008 (major bi-annual worldwide photography trade show) later this year.
Pornado! watch out!
Kodak Uncovered link above Crashed browser. Beware.
When you can watch everything - like google street view - snow crash's Gargoyles get closer to reality. The fact that so many have searched for cool things to see in such a huge amount of data is an indicator of what people will search through it.
When a Ball Dreams, It Dreams it's a Frisbee.
>> in an aerial photo of a field 1.5 miles [about 2.5 km] across, you could detect an object about the size of a small notebook computer
That's either a really tall tripod or image stabilization has come a lot farther than I thought.
-b
No offense, but I've stopped responding to AC's.
Hi-Rez Pr0n!!
Gimme!!!
I have a Mamiya 645 J (I think it is) and an older Yashica Mat 124 G that I wish had digital backs. I wonder how hard it would be to make my own back.
Unfortunately, Hasselblad has given up on the V system line (as the H system is a completely different design) and only the lowly 16mp back is offered with a square sensor. And its mostly as a tribute to V system diehards and possibly be discontinued soon.
That means that if a V system user want to upgrade to a new digital back, like the 50mp one, will need to dump the whole system. The lenses can be used with adaptors but then you will miss their real focal length and the autofocus and electronics of the H system. Which unfortunately goes against the philosophy of the "old" Hasselblad company where one could mix modern and old components freely. That meant that you could stick a modern lens and a digital back on a 50 year old body. Now, its pretty much "dump everything" to upgrade.
I don't do any normal photography, or even own a digital camera, so I don't really know how they're built or what sorts of apertures would be used with this. But I do study astronomy, and we're often diffraction limited. Aren't digital cameras getting to the point where they are diffraction limited instead of pixel resolution limited? They have to get there sometime, if they haven't already, and then continuing to increase the pixel res won't matter much.
I did manage to spend about 30 seconds reading the article though.
from cnet we have:
The specs on the two cameras, however, show the lower-resolution version to be faster: 1.4 seconds per capture for the H3DII-39 over 1.1 seconds for the H3DII-50. That could simply be implementation-specific, though.
Indeed, 1.4 seconds is a very long time to not move. Only useful for objects and scenery, certainly not going to do people or wildlife.
I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
If you shoot RAW. Only about 200 pics on a 16GB card. Even less if you do RAW+JPG.
I would really like to put one of these in a telescope, maybe there is a camera adapter I could use. I think that would be cooler than using it for ad's (which is probably what it is for)
My ism, it's full of beliefs.
Did anyone notice that the speed part of the CNET article made no sense?
"The specs on the two cameras, however, show the lower-resolution version to be faster: 1.4 seconds per capture for the H3DII-39 over 1.1 seconds for the H3DII-50. That could simply be implementation-specific, though."
Unless things have changed, 1.4 seconds is not faster than 1.1
those of us in third world countries like New Zealand who have to pay in blood for our bandwidth are going to start seeing Users sending (or trying to send) their friends 40+ meg attachments once those cameras become standard consumer issue. Trying to explain to my dad how to load MS Paint, and shrink the image, resulted in him writing down the instructions, and then promptly ringing me the first time he had to follow those instructions.
The major ISPs in this country who offer "broadband" plans with 200MB traffic per month -- yes, you read that right: MB -- are going going to have to do some serious reassessing. As it is, with Xbox demo games upward of 1GB, I don't know how we're putting up with this garbage.
As Uncle Ben said: "With great power comes great responsibility." Everybody wants the power, but nobody wants the responsibility.
I'll probably be marked as a troll, but this is a serious issue. How many of you have received one page word docs, or excel spreadsheets from companies, only to find that those files were over 5 megs? just a bunch of text, and fecking huge 12 million DPI logo.
I'm not saying we should stay in the dark ages, but we need to start preparing.
The reason girls and Windows users don't understand UNIX is because all the documentation is in Man files.
640 kpixels ought to be enough for anybody.
I know very little about optics, but how big would the lens need to be to capitalize on all 50 million pixels? They say the sensor could detect a laptop from an aerial photo, but could the optics?
Uh, ... today?
I don't think a do-it yourself digital back for your old camera is a very realistic project, unless you're an experienced Analog & Digital electronics designer. Kodak used to have a pretty nice demo board for their CMOS imager chips, which was about as "plug and play" as you could hope for, but I haven't seen anything for their higher-end CCD sensors...
Actually, they do have an evaluation board listed for the previous version of this sensor:
http://www.kodak.com/global/en/business/ISS/Products/Fullframe/KAF-39000/support.jhtml?pq-path=11937/11938/12138/12249/12265
That probably means they'll have one for the 50MP version soon(ish). Reading the documents on that page should give you an idea of the level of work involved.
To get the same resolution using a CCD, you'll want 400 dots per mm, or 10,000 dots per inch. That's 100 megapixels per square inch.
On a 35mm camera, that's approximately 132 megapixels. For a 6x9 medium-format shot, 56 × 84, it's approximately 718 megapixels.
If resolution doubles every 18 months or so, we should be there by 2014.
I'm probably 5 years too late in declaring that film is becoming a niche market.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
They are called scanning backs because that is precisely what they do.
And yes, the resolution is unparalleled. 50 megapixels was achieved in these, oh maybe 10 years ago. Its not uncommon today for these to generate files in excess of 1GB.
-
Old digital backs are still for sale on the market because they have no moving parts to fail. They work great.
Some of them have to be tethered to a computer.
Pretty soon there will be a good surplus of used 22MP backs on the market for about the price of a 1DS MKIII ($8000). I think the mamiya ZD is trading at $10k, brand new, with lens and camera body included.
-
Wow, this would be so cool. At this resolution, I expect you could crop the tiniest square out and be able to enlarge the hell out of it with it looking pixelated.
So instead of taking 100 photos, you could just take one big one of the whole school (at a ball game maybe?) and then crop headshots out all day.
And then there's the voyeurs...hot girls better watch out I guess.
Samsung took back my unlocked bootloader because Google wants me to rent movies. They're both evil.
how impossible is it to take a shot- and move the sensor- and reshoot?
imagine a 25 MP sensor mounted with something that expands when a current is applied.
take a picture, and apply a smidge of current, and take a picture.
now process the two results into one double resolution pixle picture-- offset just enough of a hair to get double the resolution.
every day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random
...in a typical medium format transparency (6x7cm) shot with a good lens (e.g. Mamiya Sekor). That's a careful assessment made by inspecting top quality drum scans. Yes, those lenses are expensive; up to $3K-4K new, but that's not just the optics - the lens integrates the leaf shutter (not focal plane, typical of consumer cameras).
For comparison, a 35mm film frame (24x36mm, iirc) carries about 15 Megapixels (there is wide consensus on this).
More here, here...
you had me at #!
Amateur (and well off) astro-photographers.
Manufacturers who are probably playing with engineering samples right now:
http://www.sbig.com/
http://www.flicamera.com/
http://www.qsimaging.com/
...how is this going to make my porn better?
My days of not taking you seriously are certainly coming to a middle...
It is commonly known as 35MM film and one can purchase the film and a good camera for under $1500.
FILM FTW, DIGITAL SUXORS!
You can get better results with a robotic camera mount hooked up to a zoom lens than this sensor, or even by film captured through a drum scanner. The only difference is this can do it in one shot.
Only if you can afford $37,000.00+. That would buy a lot of film and developing solutions... I know that the larger the format when doing black and white, the better the tonality... I wonder how that translates in digital, given you have way less latitude than b+w film. But if you have the bucks, why not? Whoever who has the best toys when they die wins, right? And hey, it is environmentally more friendly than wet photography.
-- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
That depends if the shooter gets paid by the head shot or paid by the hour.
I am putting my money on he will drag the process out rather than crop like a fiend at his/her workstation (and probably not get paid much fo that time)..
That, and the 50 kids that were talking to each other or had their eyes shut.
It WOULD be interesting to take some hi-res shots of stadium crowds to spot gems like this: http://my.break.com/content/view.aspx?ContentID=353366
You take this camera up to an altitude of 1 mile or whatever it is that gives you a 1.5mi wide field of view with your favorite lens, and I'll hide my original blue iBook somewhere in the field of view and you tell me where from a single snapshot to collect your $100.
If you lose, you can give me the (obviously overhyped) camera.
Sure. Unless it's blurry. 50MP at 4x3 aspect ratio is at least 8165 horizontal pixels. Most digital cameras have a similar angle of view as a 35mm camera - which Wikipedia lists as 39.6 degrees. Can you keep your camera from moving more than 8 arc-seconds (half a pixel width) during the exposure period?
Forget just getting a good tripod. Get a remote, too, so you're not even bumping it to press the shutter button.
Also, divvying up those photons 50 million ways means each CCD pixel gets less, so unless you're using the sort of lenses that the medium format camera in the article would have, you'd have to use longer exposures (and/or cool down the CCD to well below freezing to reduce thermal noise, which is what many astronomy geeks do).
how impossible is it to take a shot- and move the sensor- and reshoot?
You're thinking of wobulation. It's a nice idea, but it doesn't work too well when your subject is also moving.
The fovea of the human eye, the part that sees details, is approximately (in a hexagonal layout) 4000x3000 photoreceptive cells. To saturate the foveal field with data, the Nyquist rate says that an image must deliver 8000 x 6000 dots. Which is 48MP. 50MP is enough to cover that field. It's still not quite enough to completely fool the eye, until the 50MP is in a grid that exactly matches the eye - and no two eyes are the same, even in a single person, and not regularly hexagonal, but actually a stochastic distribution in a roughly six-axial surface across the inside of an uneven sphere.
And even then, the fovea is only about 1mm, capturing a 2-degree field in the middle of vision, about double the width of your thumbnail at arm's length. These 50MP cameras only capture the amount of info that's in the central 2 degrees, though the human eye captures data (though much less per degree outside the fovea) from a visual field with a 160 degree horizontal width and 135 degrees vertical height. Unless the image delivery can track the eye's movement to stay projected on the fovea, the image has to have foveal (over) density imagery across the entire scene for the fovea to track across.
But for images to stare at, 50MP is about the foveal (over) resolution. Further improvement is probably better off invested in image delivery technology, as we're sampling at about the limit of what we can actually see.
--
make install -not war
By niche market, I was thinking of 19th-century films and development processes, which some artists and hobbyists prefer because of what they can do or "just because."
Yes, there are people who still do Tintype. Not many, but they exist.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
Each photosite is around 1 ft across in that hypothetical 1.5 mile wide view (actually really a little smaller, and only in one axis - the image pixel count is 8176 x 6132).
But that's just a photosite. Each photosite is behind a grid in a Bayer array, which means each photosite is either red, green, or blue. If you have a green laptop behind a green filter - it'll just look black.
So it's an impressive number of pixels, but you lose more detail than you might think even with the huge numbers.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
50MP is nice but what the medium formant world really needs is a full frame 6x7cm sensor. It really doesn't do the world any good to stick more pixels into a area you already have covered.
As to some of the negativity surrounding this chip and the expensive hardware it goes in, may I suggest used. One of the best things I ever did for my self as a hobbiest is to go out and buy some old medium format hardware and really learn photography. The advantages of the depth of field control, the excellent optics and the move away from automation/electronics really gets you in touch with the craft. The good thing about this set-up is that it just makes older used medium format hardware cheaper. So people that enjoy photography but don't make a living at it can reap the benefits of the digital age by buying used leaf or whatever backs.
Dave
As another poster stated. It's not just about resolution. The megapixel seems to be the megaherz of digital cameras.
For your average vacation shots a real HDR sensor would be much more valuable than yet another megapixel. See eg.
Panasonic sensor tackles key photo problem--dynamic range
All you need is a requirement for a really large print or, alternatively, a reason to shoot in low-light conditions. Most consumer digital camera manufacturers set a goal of matching 35mm film (they've actually exceeded it by now). But the joke of this is that 35mm film is just barely large enough to make good 8x10 prints, provided you've carefully composed your image. Me, I can't afford a camera that uses this sensor, so I'll keep on using my medium-format film camera. At least the parts are cheaper.
one can finally see if they are fake or not..
Hasselblad merged with Imacon several years ago and the lenses today are no longer from Zeiss but from Fuji.
What is described in the Kodak doc as "the popular format 48 x 36 mm" isn't popular at all among former Medium Format users. They were used to the popular formats 56 x 43 and 56 x 56 mm and the lenses, mirrors, prisms, screens are in fact too big for this sensor size. A true adaption to the reduced sensor format goes a lot slower than what happened in the switch from full frame 35 mm to the APS digital systems. With full frame (35mm film alike)sensor DSLRs now more and more appearing on the scene at acceptable prices the difference between medium format and full frame is reduced to a factor 2 in sensor area where it was at least a factor 3 in film frame size and often closer to 4x.
Ernst
but I didn't know how bad it was.
TANSTAAFL GIGO Acronyms to live by!
its as good as upconverted DVD..
Ok so when do they fit one on the Hubble?
Build a Man a Fire, and He'll Be Warm for a Day. Set a Man on Fire, and He'll Be Warm for the Rest of His Life.
Kodak Specs
Kodak News Release
Hi-Rez Pr0n!!
Gimme!!!
Yeah, there's nothing that gets my mojo going like being able to see razor burn. (Ditto for HD TV porn video.)
All those university students who have done photo projects with them and all those (admittedly often faux-) serious artists who use them might take issue with you. But, if you insist, take a step up in price to this camera and experience a consumer/student grade medium format camera that's really quite rewarding and definitely not a toy.
Or do you insist that "consumer-grade" must necessarily employ useless bells and whistles and silly flashing lights? If so...never mind.
So that's about 8165 x 6124 at your standard 4:3, and an image of approx 27" x 20" when printed at 300dpi...
This is not meant for billboards. The example of taking an aerial picture was probably made because it is the primary use this type of cameras get - aerophotogrammetric images, cartography, mapping.
I hope that you realize that your inkjet printer's DPI does not relate at all to PELS (Picture ELEments) resolution. In order to print the wide gamut of colors from just the CMYK inks, inkjet printers print color cells.
Example 1: An HP 600dpi printer has a 4x4 color cell (16 spots to put ink dots), resulting in an effective resolution of 150 pels/inch.
An Epson 1440dpi printer can put a partially overlapping ink dot every 1/1440th of an inch, but in terms of pels/inch it only manages about 240/inch.
The upshot is that most prints you see are less than 300 pels/inch, and they look beautiful. And sending an 1440ppi (Pixels Per Inch) image to your 1440dpi inkjet results in huge files and long transmission times just so that the printer can throw away about 90% of the picture information.
"It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
I like the compact Point-and-Shoot cameras because they are easy to travel with. I spend some coin on a nice 7MP camera with nice optics, but I'm finding that the print quality sucks because I can't turn off the JPEG compression in the camera.
I'd love to find a compact Point-n-Shoot that can save images in uncompressed formats. Anyone know of one?