have proved invaluable in the large-scale computer-oriented design
process. Although MIF has not yet entered into the merit function
formulation to use in assessment of system quality, it typically
outweighs other criteria.
In the evaluation of prototype systems a correlation between
paper design and hardware execution is essential to development
process. As of this writing, modulation and phase measurements
provide the best readily available measurements for the establishment
of such correlation.
It has not yet proved possible to utilize MTF and OTF
evaluation in routine characterizations of wide-angle lenses
such as those typically used for photogrammetric purposes. The
difficulties encountered in attempts to do this lie both in physical
contortions (the very precise adjustments and locations of equipment
parts) necessary and the uncertainties in the results of subsequent
analysis of the data obtained.
It is envisioned, however, that routine contrast measurements
with electro-optical equipment can be made to augment, or eventually
to replace, other forms of testing in the screening, and even
perhaps in the final evaluation of lenses having more modest angular
coverage.
5.9.6 University of Rochester and Trapel
5.9.6.1 Slaymaker69 notes that in MTF measurements there are three
sources of noise which can enter at almost any step which must be
considered: Those introduced experimentally, those due to the
quantum nature of light itself, and shot noise from the photocathode
of the photodetector. Assuming that the first two can be reduced
to negligible values, he deals with shot noise which appears both
as a bias term added to the true value of the MIF and as a variance
in the measurement. He shows that in making an OTF measurement by
means of a knife-edge scanner, the effect of the shot noise can be
reduced to an acceptable level by establishing a maximum value for
the scan velocity. An upper bound for the noise bias can be calculated
either from the variance in the experimental data or computed from known
values for the electrical bandwidth, the time to make the scan, the
gain of the photodetector and the anode current. To verify the noise
calculation experimentally, Slaymaker measures the variance in the
MTF data. He then calculates the mean and standard deviation for
the data at specific spatial frequencies for a number of repeated
scans.
A comparison of the calculated and experimental results
obtained with a 0.1 x Micro Tropar lens having a focal length of
26 mm, an f/number of f/1.6, and a theoretical cutoff frequency some-
what above 1200 cycles/mm, shows good agreement at spatial frequencies
27