32 THE PHOTOGRAPHIC IMAGE, AUTHOR’S PRESENTATION
also to measure in principle; I think in practice
it is not so easy but let us give all credit to this,
that it is in principle a real physical property
which you can define and measure. Of course, if
all our measuring methods are good, it is in-
dependent of the method of measuring, which
is a very great advantage.
It also should be sufficiently obvious that
the CT curve is so much better than the re-
solution figure, because it covers a range of
frequencies; it is better in the same way that a
transmission curve or a minus blue filter is
better than a nominal specification of a cut-out
line, which tells you nothing whatsoever about
the transmission of the filter at other wave-
lengths.
Another very useful feature is that in prin-
ciple you get out of this curve the behaviour
of the lens for a whole range of image contrasts,
which is very valuable. In general, the image
contrasts in our photography are very low, they
can be very low but they are-not always ex-
tremely low; there are cases in low altitude pho-
tography of towns, shall we say, where you can
get very high contrast. So neither low contrast
nor high contrast resolution testing in them-
selves give you all the information you need
and, of course, with the CT tests you can derive
everything you want. I know of nothing else
that gives you that comprehensive kind of per-
formance assessment.
As to methods of measurement, this still, it
seems to me, is very much in a state of flux. AII
kinds of methods are published, a lot of people
use them and a lot more people talk about them.
I should make our own position clear. At the
Royal Aircraft Establishment we have not made
very many measurements, for various reasons
with which I will not bother you. However, after
some fairly lengthy adventures in electronics we
have for the time being gone back to measuring
the spread function by photo-electric means,
and doing the necessary mathematical analysis
of that on the Mercury computor at RAE, which
is slightly laborious but seems to be giving quite
good results; unfortunately, it is a little early to
be worth quoting any of them.
For the other results we have seen, I ac-
knowledge again my indebtedness to Professor
Ingelstam for the only result on 6 inch wide
angle lenses, and even these are on axis only,
they do not give us off axis results.
Passing on again to some more aspects of
the frequency response approach I do agree that
the analogy of frequency response in optical
systems with frequency response in other phy-
sical systems has been very fruitful. It helps us
to a better understanding of limitation in the
photographic process. However, I think we have
to be on our guard all the time against assuming
the analogy is perfect. I feel the photographic
case is very different from many of the electronic
cases, of which we very often think. It is so
often the case in electronics that the amplifier
or filter for whatever system is substantially
perfect over the bandwidth in which you are
interested. The gain can be constant and the
phase shift negligible over the region you want
to use. You can regard it, therefore, as easily
specified by something like the half-power
points, you can specify the band width in a very
legitimate way. But in photography we are al-
ways pushing up to the limits of the band
widths. We are really interested in the region
where the image is beginning to deteriorate, and
this is the region where, in the analogy, the gain
is falling rapidly and the phase shift is begin-
ning to be important. To my simple mind, this
makes the interpretation much more difficult
and complicated.
In conclusion, I say again that while CT tests
are obviously the thing for the future, I do not
think we have to burn up all our resolution tests
and say that they are no use. They are still quite
valid if they are properly carried out. We would
say, especially if they are low contrast tests they
valid. In that connection I am very interested
to see a paper by Mr Bousky in the technical
literature to this Congress, which is, in effect, an
impassioned plea for low contrast testing. Mr
Bousky is with Chicago Aerial Industries.
The CT tests help us to a better understand-
ing of the value and the limitations of our reso-
lution tests and we should push on with them,
but in the meantime we can carry on with our
resolution tests and anything we can do to im-
prove their precision is well worth doing.
I do not want to take up the whole time I
have been allocated, I think it is much more
important that other people should have a
chance to say something, so with the President's
approval I will sit down and invite comments
and questions on this subject.
Mr E. WEL.
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