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as sine waves. In
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or large areas, and
rical expression to
THE PHOTOGRAPHIC IMAGE, BROCK 11
the contrast-transfer for large areas and to the spatial frequency at which the contrast-
transfer becomes zero, but we cannot show contrast-transfer as a continuous function of
frequency. This would not matter if the normalised function could be shown to have the
same shape for all combinations of emulsion and opties; in practice the shape is not
always the same, and we stand to learn more about the behaviour of the system by having
full information about its contrast-transfer over the whole working range of frequency.
There is an important difference between the CT behaviour of lens and emulsion.
The CT funetion for the lens is quite independent of the absolute levels of luminance
in the object; whatever these may be, the transmission of contrast at a given frequency
will always be the same. In the lens only one contrast-reducing factor is at work (Except,
of course, for veiling glare). In the emulsion, however, we can recognise two processes;
an optical reduction of contrast due to scatter, which is frequency-dependent but linear
with intensity, plus a recording process (making the optical image visible) which is not
linear with intensity and carries with it the random structure known as granularity. For
perfect reproduction the transparencies of the negative should be inversely proportional
to the corresponding object luminances, i.e.
B, T,
B, T
Strict proportional only occurs, however, on the straight part of the characteristic
curve, and if the slope of this is y,
B, n
so, unless y is unity, the relation is not linear, even when B, and B, are not widely dif-
ferent. For large differences of image illuminance, as with a black and white object, the
curvature of the lower part of the characteristic also comes into play, and further dis-
tortion takes place. In the electronie analogy, a non-linear characteristic generates har-
monies, e.g. a quadratie curve generates even harmonies. A square wave of say 3 lines/
mm has odd harmonies at 9, 15, 21, 27, etc. lines per mm. On a fine grained emulsion
capable of resolving say 60 lines/mm low contrast these would be reproduced with small
loss up to the 9th harmonie or so, but non-linearity should by analogy generate other
harmonics, e.g. 6, 12, 18 etc. lines per mm which were not in the original wave and must
distort its shape. How far the analogy holds is not known, but clearly these effects need
to be worked out and their implications studied. There can be no doubt that non-linear
photographie reproduction of a single sine wave will distort its shape, which is merely
another way of saying that harmonies are introduced. Since the overall gamma in air
photography is normally greater than unity, the non-linearities of the negative stage
will not be compensated in the printing stage and the inference is that some distortion of
edges is always present. There would appear, in fact, to be inevitable penalties in in-
creasing contrast as a device to increase apparent sharpness.
Also there are the neighbourhood and tanning phenomena acting to spoil the faithful
rendering of small contrasting details by emphacis on particular frequencies.
Fortunately, in air photography the image contrasts are small enabling some of
these effects to be reduced by keeping to the straight part of the characteristic curve, or
by working over a small part of a non-linear characteristic. Nevertheless, it appears that
there is a good deal of work to be done before emulsion frequency response can be defined
in unambiguous terms. In the meantime it. is probably better to make determinations
under the conditions of practical use accepting any non-linearity due to working at high
gammas, and keeping target contrast small. A few CT curves have been published for
emulsions of interest in air photography, but the precise meaning of such curves is not
clear. They usually show the CT function as unity at low frequencies, yet the quoted