Showing posts with label UV transmission. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UV transmission. Show all posts

Monday, April 9, 2012

[UV] Light Source - Flower - Filter - Lens - Sensor: a simulation of reflected UV photography

Well, just some ideas that came into my mind quite a while ago, when I was thinking about the chain:
Light Source -> Flower -> Filter -> Lens ->Sensor

To simplify things, let's assume

a) the light source being sunlight or Xenon light, as they are quite similar in the interesting UV region 300-400nm.
b) the lens being a quartz fluorite lens with flat transmittance in the interesting UV region 300-400nm

[click on image to see a larger one]

So here graphs (normalized to unity) showing in this example
1) flower (Mexican Zinnia, UV reflective flower tip): green line
2) filter (Baader U filter 2"): blue line
3) sensor (Nikon D200 mod. with quartz glass internal filter): red line



now lets add what that flower looks like after having passed the filter (pink line)



and finally what that sensor records of that (cyan line)



btw. if a normal, but UV transmitting glass lens (Noflexar 35mm - yellowish line) is used between filter and sensor, then the result looks like that:



The simple laymans terms summary: This is what the flowers reflects (green line) and what the camera records of it (cyan line) through a Baader U filter and Noflexar 35mm lens:



The bad news is, that it will only be a bit better if a quartz fluorite lens is being used, but not substantially.



So in the first case the 320-390nm Baader U filter appears like a 372BP15 bandpass filter and in the second, better example, like a 365BP16 bandpass filter. This has nothing to do with the type or quality of the Baader U filter, but is caused only by the process chain it is used within!


***THESE ARE VERY SIMPLIFIED SIMULATIONS BARE SCIENTIFIC ACCURRACY, SO NO DECISION, JUST INSIGHT SHOULD BE BASED ON THAT***


Stay tuned, more will follow on that fascinating subject...

More info on this very interesting field may be found on my site http://www.pbase.com/kds315/uv_photos

Monday, February 21, 2011

[UV] EL-Nikkor 80mm for UV - old vs. new type

As I was testing (again) lenses for UV photography, I had done spectrometric tests on Nikon EL-Nikkor enlarger lenses. The question arose, if the newer 80mm EL-Nikkor has as good an UV transmission as the older, full metal type. So now since I found a new one, here the comparison transmission graph old metal one vs new plastic "tyre like" version. Both are f5.6/80mm.

[click on image to see a larger one]

UV transmission graph:


In terms of UV transmission, quite a substantial difference of about one stop in favor of the old type I would say. The newer one seems to have some fancy new multicoating, which brings the transmission losses in the visual range substantially down, but the UV transmission has been quite reduced by doing so.

P.S.: the 80mm EL-Nikkor (the older, chrome black full metal type) has an adapter ring on its base with outer M39x26tpi screw mount (Leica enlarger mount). Beneath it is a M25 thread for older #00 shutters. Company Schneider Optics offers adapter rings, if that one should be missing (oder code 92-013251).
P.P.S.: the filter thread of that older EL-Nikkor 80mm is 34.5mm, which is pretty uncommon, ask me if you need an adapter ring.

Stay tuned, more will follow on that fascinating subject...

More info on this very interesting field may be found on my site http://www.pbase.com/kds315/uv_photos