| Introduction | ISO sensitivity | Noise | Color sensitivity | Sharpness | Distortion | Light transmission | Vignetting | LCA |
Lens refraction depends on the wavelength. This means that magnification not only depends on the image field position but also on the light wavelength. A perfectly sharp edge going from white to black yields a smooth transition showing the decomposition of the light spectrum.
This has two major effects on the sensor. Each channel (usually R, G, B) is blurry because it integrates a certain range of wavelengths that are imaged at different positions on the sensor. Moreover, the different channels are shifted with respect to one another. This usually yields colored fringes along edges with a high level of contrast. DxOMark measures the maximal shift between the three color channels. This measure is a distance.
LCA is expressed in µm on 24x36 mm. 10 µm is a typical level of acceptability.
Lateral chromatic aberration is easily computed by considering the image of a black spot on a white background.
Mr is the center of the spot in the red channel, Mg in the green channel, Mb in the blue channel. LCA corresponds to the distances between the positions of Mb and Mg, and of Mr and Mg.
Using a target covered with black dots on a white background, we evaluate LCA all over the field.
We compute statistical data such as maximum and mean values for the image, then we use a color scale to map those values as functions of focal length and aperture value.
We plot curves that represent the variation as a function of the field position of the shifts between the red and green channels on the one hand, and between the blue and green channels on the other hand.
We measure LCA for each focal length and aperture.
We map the variation of the maximum of LCA in the image at each field position for different values of focal lengths and apertures.
To provide photographers with a broader perspective about mobiles, lenses and cameras, here are links to articles, reviews, and analyses of photographic equipment produced by DxOMark, renown websites, magazines or blogs.
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The Nikon D5000 and the Canon EOS 500D were two main releases for spring 2009. Launched at the same time, and targeting the same market, these two cameras were the perfect subjects to use for an extensive demonstration of the DxOMark Database. |
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A detailed look at DxOMark's image quality testing protocols, including laboratory conditions and setup, methods, test-specific tools, and software that DxO Labs developed and uses to ensure scientific, bias-free data and repeatable results. |
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On DxOMark, we evaluate and rank many types of digital cameras with image sensors that vary widely in pixel count, pixel size, and digital signal processing. To ensure that sensor performance comparisons between cameras are fair, it is very important both to test under identical shooting conditions and to take viewing conditions into account. |