Filtering main light source vs post processing of RGB channels.
- Blue&green
- Posts: 6
- Joined: Fri Dec 13, 2019 9:22 pm
- Location: Canterbury, UK
Filtering main light source vs post processing of RGB channels.
Hi Everyone,
I would be interested to know peoples experimentation/opinion on the following specific to life science compound microscopy please;
In correcting light aberration using green spectrum exciting with Achromatic objectives,
The discernible results between;
Filtering light at source with a green filter vs using the manufacturers light source as intended and extracting the green layer from the RBG information post RAW Image?
Thank you in anticipation of your kind responses.
Regards Graham.
I would be interested to know peoples experimentation/opinion on the following specific to life science compound microscopy please;
In correcting light aberration using green spectrum exciting with Achromatic objectives,
The discernible results between;
Filtering light at source with a green filter vs using the manufacturers light source as intended and extracting the green layer from the RBG information post RAW Image?
Thank you in anticipation of your kind responses.
Regards Graham.
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- Posts: 137
- Joined: Thu Dec 15, 2016 6:32 am
Re: Filtering main light source vs post processing of RGB channels.
Well, it would depend on how strict you want it to be. If it's just for getting rid of color and spherical aberrations, both would work OK. Post processing would be a bit harder since it's difficult to discern the best focus point in green while looking at an rgb image.
Another consideration would be, the spectral transmission of the filters. RGB filters on a color sensor have pretty broad transmission characteristics (and it's hard to find transmission curves for consumer sensors), whereas a dedicated interference filter would have tighter transmission properties with improved results.
Cheers,
John
Another consideration would be, the spectral transmission of the filters. RGB filters on a color sensor have pretty broad transmission characteristics (and it's hard to find transmission curves for consumer sensors), whereas a dedicated interference filter would have tighter transmission properties with improved results.
Cheers,
John
- Blue&green
- Posts: 6
- Joined: Fri Dec 13, 2019 9:22 pm
- Location: Canterbury, UK
Re: Filtering main light source vs post processing of RGB channels.
Thanks John,
I guess its going to be a trial between the two and see which is visually perceived sharper.
I guess its going to be a trial between the two and see which is visually perceived sharper.
Re: Filtering main light source vs post processing of RGB channels.
If your camera can shoot in RAW format the Camera Raw plugin for Photoshop has a 'remove chromatic aberration' feature. The colour range of the aberration you wish to remove and intensity can be set manually. Obviously only applicable for Photoshop users with a RAW capable camera, but worth mentioning as it works well.
- Blue&green
- Posts: 6
- Joined: Fri Dec 13, 2019 9:22 pm
- Location: Canterbury, UK
Re: Filtering main light source vs post processing of RGB channels.
Hi Chris, thank you for your reply.
Your comment was extremely useful, I have boycott Photoshop since the monthly fees because I can go three or four months without using it and considered it to be a waste of money keep paying out monthly when not using it so I paid and migrated to for Affinity Photo. I have discovered that Affinity has an equal command called "fringe" which does the same function. Interesting as before your comment I didn't know of this command.
I will have a look in a spare five minutes and see what I can learn.
Thank you again,
Regards Graham.
PS side note; Affinity Photo has a really good focus stack function which I have found incredibly good. I do not use Combine ZP now.
Your comment was extremely useful, I have boycott Photoshop since the monthly fees because I can go three or four months without using it and considered it to be a waste of money keep paying out monthly when not using it so I paid and migrated to for Affinity Photo. I have discovered that Affinity has an equal command called "fringe" which does the same function. Interesting as before your comment I didn't know of this command.
I will have a look in a spare five minutes and see what I can learn.
Thank you again,
Regards Graham.
PS side note; Affinity Photo has a really good focus stack function which I have found incredibly good. I do not use Combine ZP now.
Re: Filtering main light source vs post processing of RGB channels.
I don't know the images or light source, but camera sensitivity has green overlapping blue and red. So if the incoming data is bad, the green channel is going to capture that.Blue&green wrote: ↑Sat Nov 14, 2020 12:23 amFiltering light at source with a green filter vs using the manufacturers light source as intended and extracting the green layer from the RBG information post RAW Image?
If you calibrate the blue and red responses, you could subtract their inputs from the green but that would probably over remove intensities leading to negative numbers, so you’ll have to then renormalize. It will still probably have good data removed though.
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Re: Filtering main light source vs post processing of RGB channels.
I think that is really the crux of the matter
Monochromatic lighting is fundamentally superior to post-processing
MichaelG.
Too many 'projects'
Re: Filtering main light source vs post processing of RGB channels.
I believe this is true, if the software used to separate into R-G-B relies on sensor sensitivity.
The disadvantage of monochromatic light, though, is the relative low intensity if obtained from white light by means of a monochromator or a filter. A LED or laser is sufficiently bright though.