Optical transfer function

Optical transfer function

Jesse Russell Ronald Cohn

     

бумажная книга



ISBN: 978-5-5140-3007-1

High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! The optical transfer function (OTF) of an imaging system (camera, video system, microscope etc.) is the true measure of resolution (image sharpness) that the system is capable of. The common practice of defining resolution in terms of pixel count is not meaningful, as it is the overall OTF of the complete system, including lens and anti-aliasing filter as well as other factors, that defines true performance. In the most common applications (cameras and video systems) it is the Modulation Transfer Function (the magnitude of the OTF), that is most relevant, although the phase component can have a secondary effect. While resolution, as commonly used with reference to camera systems, describes only the number of pixels in an image, and hence the potential to show fine detail, the transfer function describes the ability of adjacent pixels to change from black to white in response to patterns of varying spatial frequency, and hence the actual capability to show fine detail, whether with full or reduced contrast. An image reproduced with an optical transfer function that `rolls off` at high spatial frequencies will appear `blurred` in everyday language. Modulation Transfer Function or MTF (the OTF magnitude with phase ignored) is roughly the equivalent of frequency response in an audio system, and can be represented by a graph of light amplitude (brightness) versus spatial frequency (cycles per picture width).