A color concam?
A color concam?
Maybe for the new concam-3 in development, you could make the camera images in color instead of black and white. This way, you could see the different colors of the stars and other phenomena in the sky, like auroras. I think it would also help determine what the occasional U.F.O. is in the concam image - you could see its color. For example, if you were to see a streak go across a concam image, you could look to see if the trail were red and blue. If so, you'd know it was an airplane.
Is this possible? If so, would color images even effect what you would see as far as airplanes, satellites, etc.?
Is this possible? If so, would color images even effect what you would see as far as airplanes, satellites, etc.?
Gnidakcolhcs
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- Ensign
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COlor CONCAMs
Color images are nice but have small scientific value. It would be infinitely better to make three simultaneous B&W images through different color filters, combine them into a "real color" image, but extract the three different magnitudes of the objects separately. This, however, requires three CCDs, three fisheye lenses, filters, etc. We are going to think about this, however. Thanks,
Noah Brosch
Noah Brosch
Re: COlor CONCAMs
how come that up to 3 times more information can have "small scientific value"? I'd say you just can't extract that value, but it doesn't mean it is not there.nbrosch wrote:Color images are nice but have small scientific value.
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- Ensign
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- Location: Back at Tel Aviv University after a sabbatical
Color images
I don't know of a way to disentangle the numerical charge value for each color when using a color CCD. In essence, what you write is correct, it is the extraction that is problematic. I also think that the individual color pixels (three for each 'real' pixel) have less charge depth than regular pixels. This would affect the dymanic range of the images.