Do cameras actively filter out UV light, or only infrared?
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I know that a camera has a filter in front of the sensor to limit incoming light to the visible spectrum, to replicate what a human eye can see. But wherever I look on the internet, I always read about the filter in front of the sensor being an infrared filter. Wouldn't the filter also have to block out UV light? I couldn't find any useful information on this on the internet :/ Also, wouldn't an active filtering of UV light in front of the sensor render UV lens-filters useless?
filters sensor light infrared uv
add a comment |
I know that a camera has a filter in front of the sensor to limit incoming light to the visible spectrum, to replicate what a human eye can see. But wherever I look on the internet, I always read about the filter in front of the sensor being an infrared filter. Wouldn't the filter also have to block out UV light? I couldn't find any useful information on this on the internet :/ Also, wouldn't an active filtering of UV light in front of the sensor render UV lens-filters useless?
filters sensor light infrared uv
3
Possible duplicate of is uv filter a must?
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:34
1
Related: Is a UV Filter required/recommended for lens protection? and Are there any downsides to using a good-quality UV filter? and What effect does a UV filter provide? and Is a UV filter better for lens protection than a protector filter?
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:39
add a comment |
I know that a camera has a filter in front of the sensor to limit incoming light to the visible spectrum, to replicate what a human eye can see. But wherever I look on the internet, I always read about the filter in front of the sensor being an infrared filter. Wouldn't the filter also have to block out UV light? I couldn't find any useful information on this on the internet :/ Also, wouldn't an active filtering of UV light in front of the sensor render UV lens-filters useless?
filters sensor light infrared uv
I know that a camera has a filter in front of the sensor to limit incoming light to the visible spectrum, to replicate what a human eye can see. But wherever I look on the internet, I always read about the filter in front of the sensor being an infrared filter. Wouldn't the filter also have to block out UV light? I couldn't find any useful information on this on the internet :/ Also, wouldn't an active filtering of UV light in front of the sensor render UV lens-filters useless?
filters sensor light infrared uv
filters sensor light infrared uv
asked Mar 28 at 12:25
TanonicTanonic
161
161
3
Possible duplicate of is uv filter a must?
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:34
1
Related: Is a UV Filter required/recommended for lens protection? and Are there any downsides to using a good-quality UV filter? and What effect does a UV filter provide? and Is a UV filter better for lens protection than a protector filter?
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:39
add a comment |
3
Possible duplicate of is uv filter a must?
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:34
1
Related: Is a UV Filter required/recommended for lens protection? and Are there any downsides to using a good-quality UV filter? and What effect does a UV filter provide? and Is a UV filter better for lens protection than a protector filter?
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:39
3
3
Possible duplicate of is uv filter a must?
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:34
Possible duplicate of is uv filter a must?
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:34
1
1
Related: Is a UV Filter required/recommended for lens protection? and Are there any downsides to using a good-quality UV filter? and What effect does a UV filter provide? and Is a UV filter better for lens protection than a protector filter?
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:39
Related: Is a UV Filter required/recommended for lens protection? and Are there any downsides to using a good-quality UV filter? and What effect does a UV filter provide? and Is a UV filter better for lens protection than a protector filter?
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:39
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
UV is annoyingly present when doing landscapes and aerial photography. It records as a haze that blocks the clear view of distant mountains and it veils the land when imaged from high altitudes. A UV blocking filter can be very helpful under these circumstances. The UV filter and a cousin called a “Skylight” filter gained popularity. The “skylight” is tinted pink, so this UV filter also warmed up cool feeling blue-sky type vistas. Special note: The UV filter only benefits when the subject is distant and shrouded by water vapor. Camera store salesmen, eager to pad a sale, generally advised, a UV filter will protect your precious, costly lens. The popularity of the UV thus soared.
With the onset of the digital camera, the need to mount a UV filter diminished because electronic photography raises different issues. The imaging sensor requires trimming with filters or it will fail to deliver a faithful image. The surface of the digital sensor is covered with an array of tiny photosites. These capture the image, but the chances that artifacts with spoil it are high. Most noteworthy is image noise. This is akin to grain in film photography. There are a plethora of these annoying artifacts.
Enter the digital camera’s protective cover glass. The surface of the digital image sensor is fragile, it is covered by a flat glass overlay. This cover glass lends itself to have a dual purpose. Some subject types will image with bizarre results. These are called “demosaicing artifacts, often seen as a moiré. To avoid, the cover glass is also a optical low-pass filter better known as a anti-aliasing filter. This filter slightly blurs fine detail that is finer than the native resolution of the senor. Additionally the cover glass will act as an infrared filter that blocks these frequencies otherwise they will record as false colors
The UV continues to be sold and mounted to protect our precious lenses.
3
Correction: The UV continues to be hyped to protect lenses.
– Hueco
Mar 28 at 15:59
add a comment |
UV lens filters in the digital era have a different purpose than actively filtering UV light. They are to protect the front element from dust, fingerprints, etc. If the glass in front of the lens gets dirty, you are much safer cleaning a $50 UV filter than a $500 lens front element.
Digital sensors are typically insensitive to UV, so you don't need the UV filter to filter it out. Source: https://www.dpreview.com/articles/7333331953/should-you-use-a-uv-filter-on-your-lens which says:
However, digital sensors are generally rather insensitive to UV, so the problem doesn't arise to anything like the same extent.
1
"They are to protect the front element from dust, fingerprints, etc." Either that, or they are there to give users a false sense of security when in some cases they can actually make things worse. To filter or not to filter, that is the question.
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:29
"Digital sensors are generally rather insensitive to UV..." mainly because there "generally" is a UV filter in the stack in front of the sensor. A bare sensor without the filter stack is more sensitive to both UV and IR at either end of the visible spectrum than a typical consumer camera that "generally" has a filter stack in front of the sensor.
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:32
2
Disagree on the cleaning. Your front element can take some abuse. Does your filter have as durable a lens coating? Probably not...
– Hueco
Mar 28 at 16:00
add a comment |
In terms of filtration there is not only the IR filter, but also the RGB CFA (color filter array) that lies directly over the sensor. These are absorptive filters and only pass the wavelengths they are designed to. I.e. adequate UV filtration is provided by the RGB Bayer array (or similar).
I have read that silicon photodiodes (pixels) are more sensitive/reactive to IR than they are to UV. This is also probably due, at least in part, to the higher refractive index of shorter wavelengths.
Perhaps that is why the CFA alone is not sufficient for near IR but it is for UV.
In any case, the individual spectral response of a camera/sensor varies somewhat... some are more or less affacted by UV/IR even with their filtration.
add a comment |
Traditional metal-oxide "diodes" register UV in very low portions.
Here is a chart for "high UV sensetive" cmos: https://www.cameraiq.ru/data/image/QE%20MicroVista%20UV.JPG
Deep UV is ~270-330
Near UV is 330-400
As you can see, even special cmos can actually reach only small part of bellow-380 UV, while simpler ones actually reach only 400+, wich is visible light
So yes and no, cmos can see UV, but they are much more sensitive in visible part of spectrum.
In everyday life, while not being somewhere your oncologist wan't be happy to be, UV filter will not make any visible difference in your image, simple blend will make much more effect under bright sun. There are stories about shooting in the mountains, where people find some usage from this filters, but ok, even sample photos from filter-makers, are good both with and without filter :-)
add a comment |
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4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
UV is annoyingly present when doing landscapes and aerial photography. It records as a haze that blocks the clear view of distant mountains and it veils the land when imaged from high altitudes. A UV blocking filter can be very helpful under these circumstances. The UV filter and a cousin called a “Skylight” filter gained popularity. The “skylight” is tinted pink, so this UV filter also warmed up cool feeling blue-sky type vistas. Special note: The UV filter only benefits when the subject is distant and shrouded by water vapor. Camera store salesmen, eager to pad a sale, generally advised, a UV filter will protect your precious, costly lens. The popularity of the UV thus soared.
With the onset of the digital camera, the need to mount a UV filter diminished because electronic photography raises different issues. The imaging sensor requires trimming with filters or it will fail to deliver a faithful image. The surface of the digital sensor is covered with an array of tiny photosites. These capture the image, but the chances that artifacts with spoil it are high. Most noteworthy is image noise. This is akin to grain in film photography. There are a plethora of these annoying artifacts.
Enter the digital camera’s protective cover glass. The surface of the digital image sensor is fragile, it is covered by a flat glass overlay. This cover glass lends itself to have a dual purpose. Some subject types will image with bizarre results. These are called “demosaicing artifacts, often seen as a moiré. To avoid, the cover glass is also a optical low-pass filter better known as a anti-aliasing filter. This filter slightly blurs fine detail that is finer than the native resolution of the senor. Additionally the cover glass will act as an infrared filter that blocks these frequencies otherwise they will record as false colors
The UV continues to be sold and mounted to protect our precious lenses.
3
Correction: The UV continues to be hyped to protect lenses.
– Hueco
Mar 28 at 15:59
add a comment |
UV is annoyingly present when doing landscapes and aerial photography. It records as a haze that blocks the clear view of distant mountains and it veils the land when imaged from high altitudes. A UV blocking filter can be very helpful under these circumstances. The UV filter and a cousin called a “Skylight” filter gained popularity. The “skylight” is tinted pink, so this UV filter also warmed up cool feeling blue-sky type vistas. Special note: The UV filter only benefits when the subject is distant and shrouded by water vapor. Camera store salesmen, eager to pad a sale, generally advised, a UV filter will protect your precious, costly lens. The popularity of the UV thus soared.
With the onset of the digital camera, the need to mount a UV filter diminished because electronic photography raises different issues. The imaging sensor requires trimming with filters or it will fail to deliver a faithful image. The surface of the digital sensor is covered with an array of tiny photosites. These capture the image, but the chances that artifacts with spoil it are high. Most noteworthy is image noise. This is akin to grain in film photography. There are a plethora of these annoying artifacts.
Enter the digital camera’s protective cover glass. The surface of the digital image sensor is fragile, it is covered by a flat glass overlay. This cover glass lends itself to have a dual purpose. Some subject types will image with bizarre results. These are called “demosaicing artifacts, often seen as a moiré. To avoid, the cover glass is also a optical low-pass filter better known as a anti-aliasing filter. This filter slightly blurs fine detail that is finer than the native resolution of the senor. Additionally the cover glass will act as an infrared filter that blocks these frequencies otherwise they will record as false colors
The UV continues to be sold and mounted to protect our precious lenses.
3
Correction: The UV continues to be hyped to protect lenses.
– Hueco
Mar 28 at 15:59
add a comment |
UV is annoyingly present when doing landscapes and aerial photography. It records as a haze that blocks the clear view of distant mountains and it veils the land when imaged from high altitudes. A UV blocking filter can be very helpful under these circumstances. The UV filter and a cousin called a “Skylight” filter gained popularity. The “skylight” is tinted pink, so this UV filter also warmed up cool feeling blue-sky type vistas. Special note: The UV filter only benefits when the subject is distant and shrouded by water vapor. Camera store salesmen, eager to pad a sale, generally advised, a UV filter will protect your precious, costly lens. The popularity of the UV thus soared.
With the onset of the digital camera, the need to mount a UV filter diminished because electronic photography raises different issues. The imaging sensor requires trimming with filters or it will fail to deliver a faithful image. The surface of the digital sensor is covered with an array of tiny photosites. These capture the image, but the chances that artifacts with spoil it are high. Most noteworthy is image noise. This is akin to grain in film photography. There are a plethora of these annoying artifacts.
Enter the digital camera’s protective cover glass. The surface of the digital image sensor is fragile, it is covered by a flat glass overlay. This cover glass lends itself to have a dual purpose. Some subject types will image with bizarre results. These are called “demosaicing artifacts, often seen as a moiré. To avoid, the cover glass is also a optical low-pass filter better known as a anti-aliasing filter. This filter slightly blurs fine detail that is finer than the native resolution of the senor. Additionally the cover glass will act as an infrared filter that blocks these frequencies otherwise they will record as false colors
The UV continues to be sold and mounted to protect our precious lenses.
UV is annoyingly present when doing landscapes and aerial photography. It records as a haze that blocks the clear view of distant mountains and it veils the land when imaged from high altitudes. A UV blocking filter can be very helpful under these circumstances. The UV filter and a cousin called a “Skylight” filter gained popularity. The “skylight” is tinted pink, so this UV filter also warmed up cool feeling blue-sky type vistas. Special note: The UV filter only benefits when the subject is distant and shrouded by water vapor. Camera store salesmen, eager to pad a sale, generally advised, a UV filter will protect your precious, costly lens. The popularity of the UV thus soared.
With the onset of the digital camera, the need to mount a UV filter diminished because electronic photography raises different issues. The imaging sensor requires trimming with filters or it will fail to deliver a faithful image. The surface of the digital sensor is covered with an array of tiny photosites. These capture the image, but the chances that artifacts with spoil it are high. Most noteworthy is image noise. This is akin to grain in film photography. There are a plethora of these annoying artifacts.
Enter the digital camera’s protective cover glass. The surface of the digital image sensor is fragile, it is covered by a flat glass overlay. This cover glass lends itself to have a dual purpose. Some subject types will image with bizarre results. These are called “demosaicing artifacts, often seen as a moiré. To avoid, the cover glass is also a optical low-pass filter better known as a anti-aliasing filter. This filter slightly blurs fine detail that is finer than the native resolution of the senor. Additionally the cover glass will act as an infrared filter that blocks these frequencies otherwise they will record as false colors
The UV continues to be sold and mounted to protect our precious lenses.
edited Mar 28 at 19:15
answered Mar 28 at 15:30
Alan MarcusAlan Marcus
25.9k23060
25.9k23060
3
Correction: The UV continues to be hyped to protect lenses.
– Hueco
Mar 28 at 15:59
add a comment |
3
Correction: The UV continues to be hyped to protect lenses.
– Hueco
Mar 28 at 15:59
3
3
Correction: The UV continues to be hyped to protect lenses.
– Hueco
Mar 28 at 15:59
Correction: The UV continues to be hyped to protect lenses.
– Hueco
Mar 28 at 15:59
add a comment |
UV lens filters in the digital era have a different purpose than actively filtering UV light. They are to protect the front element from dust, fingerprints, etc. If the glass in front of the lens gets dirty, you are much safer cleaning a $50 UV filter than a $500 lens front element.
Digital sensors are typically insensitive to UV, so you don't need the UV filter to filter it out. Source: https://www.dpreview.com/articles/7333331953/should-you-use-a-uv-filter-on-your-lens which says:
However, digital sensors are generally rather insensitive to UV, so the problem doesn't arise to anything like the same extent.
1
"They are to protect the front element from dust, fingerprints, etc." Either that, or they are there to give users a false sense of security when in some cases they can actually make things worse. To filter or not to filter, that is the question.
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:29
"Digital sensors are generally rather insensitive to UV..." mainly because there "generally" is a UV filter in the stack in front of the sensor. A bare sensor without the filter stack is more sensitive to both UV and IR at either end of the visible spectrum than a typical consumer camera that "generally" has a filter stack in front of the sensor.
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:32
2
Disagree on the cleaning. Your front element can take some abuse. Does your filter have as durable a lens coating? Probably not...
– Hueco
Mar 28 at 16:00
add a comment |
UV lens filters in the digital era have a different purpose than actively filtering UV light. They are to protect the front element from dust, fingerprints, etc. If the glass in front of the lens gets dirty, you are much safer cleaning a $50 UV filter than a $500 lens front element.
Digital sensors are typically insensitive to UV, so you don't need the UV filter to filter it out. Source: https://www.dpreview.com/articles/7333331953/should-you-use-a-uv-filter-on-your-lens which says:
However, digital sensors are generally rather insensitive to UV, so the problem doesn't arise to anything like the same extent.
1
"They are to protect the front element from dust, fingerprints, etc." Either that, or they are there to give users a false sense of security when in some cases they can actually make things worse. To filter or not to filter, that is the question.
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:29
"Digital sensors are generally rather insensitive to UV..." mainly because there "generally" is a UV filter in the stack in front of the sensor. A bare sensor without the filter stack is more sensitive to both UV and IR at either end of the visible spectrum than a typical consumer camera that "generally" has a filter stack in front of the sensor.
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:32
2
Disagree on the cleaning. Your front element can take some abuse. Does your filter have as durable a lens coating? Probably not...
– Hueco
Mar 28 at 16:00
add a comment |
UV lens filters in the digital era have a different purpose than actively filtering UV light. They are to protect the front element from dust, fingerprints, etc. If the glass in front of the lens gets dirty, you are much safer cleaning a $50 UV filter than a $500 lens front element.
Digital sensors are typically insensitive to UV, so you don't need the UV filter to filter it out. Source: https://www.dpreview.com/articles/7333331953/should-you-use-a-uv-filter-on-your-lens which says:
However, digital sensors are generally rather insensitive to UV, so the problem doesn't arise to anything like the same extent.
UV lens filters in the digital era have a different purpose than actively filtering UV light. They are to protect the front element from dust, fingerprints, etc. If the glass in front of the lens gets dirty, you are much safer cleaning a $50 UV filter than a $500 lens front element.
Digital sensors are typically insensitive to UV, so you don't need the UV filter to filter it out. Source: https://www.dpreview.com/articles/7333331953/should-you-use-a-uv-filter-on-your-lens which says:
However, digital sensors are generally rather insensitive to UV, so the problem doesn't arise to anything like the same extent.
answered Mar 28 at 12:38
juhistjuhist
931114
931114
1
"They are to protect the front element from dust, fingerprints, etc." Either that, or they are there to give users a false sense of security when in some cases they can actually make things worse. To filter or not to filter, that is the question.
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:29
"Digital sensors are generally rather insensitive to UV..." mainly because there "generally" is a UV filter in the stack in front of the sensor. A bare sensor without the filter stack is more sensitive to both UV and IR at either end of the visible spectrum than a typical consumer camera that "generally" has a filter stack in front of the sensor.
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:32
2
Disagree on the cleaning. Your front element can take some abuse. Does your filter have as durable a lens coating? Probably not...
– Hueco
Mar 28 at 16:00
add a comment |
1
"They are to protect the front element from dust, fingerprints, etc." Either that, or they are there to give users a false sense of security when in some cases they can actually make things worse. To filter or not to filter, that is the question.
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:29
"Digital sensors are generally rather insensitive to UV..." mainly because there "generally" is a UV filter in the stack in front of the sensor. A bare sensor without the filter stack is more sensitive to both UV and IR at either end of the visible spectrum than a typical consumer camera that "generally" has a filter stack in front of the sensor.
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:32
2
Disagree on the cleaning. Your front element can take some abuse. Does your filter have as durable a lens coating? Probably not...
– Hueco
Mar 28 at 16:00
1
1
"They are to protect the front element from dust, fingerprints, etc." Either that, or they are there to give users a false sense of security when in some cases they can actually make things worse. To filter or not to filter, that is the question.
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:29
"They are to protect the front element from dust, fingerprints, etc." Either that, or they are there to give users a false sense of security when in some cases they can actually make things worse. To filter or not to filter, that is the question.
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:29
"Digital sensors are generally rather insensitive to UV..." mainly because there "generally" is a UV filter in the stack in front of the sensor. A bare sensor without the filter stack is more sensitive to both UV and IR at either end of the visible spectrum than a typical consumer camera that "generally" has a filter stack in front of the sensor.
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:32
"Digital sensors are generally rather insensitive to UV..." mainly because there "generally" is a UV filter in the stack in front of the sensor. A bare sensor without the filter stack is more sensitive to both UV and IR at either end of the visible spectrum than a typical consumer camera that "generally" has a filter stack in front of the sensor.
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:32
2
2
Disagree on the cleaning. Your front element can take some abuse. Does your filter have as durable a lens coating? Probably not...
– Hueco
Mar 28 at 16:00
Disagree on the cleaning. Your front element can take some abuse. Does your filter have as durable a lens coating? Probably not...
– Hueco
Mar 28 at 16:00
add a comment |
In terms of filtration there is not only the IR filter, but also the RGB CFA (color filter array) that lies directly over the sensor. These are absorptive filters and only pass the wavelengths they are designed to. I.e. adequate UV filtration is provided by the RGB Bayer array (or similar).
I have read that silicon photodiodes (pixels) are more sensitive/reactive to IR than they are to UV. This is also probably due, at least in part, to the higher refractive index of shorter wavelengths.
Perhaps that is why the CFA alone is not sufficient for near IR but it is for UV.
In any case, the individual spectral response of a camera/sensor varies somewhat... some are more or less affacted by UV/IR even with their filtration.
add a comment |
In terms of filtration there is not only the IR filter, but also the RGB CFA (color filter array) that lies directly over the sensor. These are absorptive filters and only pass the wavelengths they are designed to. I.e. adequate UV filtration is provided by the RGB Bayer array (or similar).
I have read that silicon photodiodes (pixels) are more sensitive/reactive to IR than they are to UV. This is also probably due, at least in part, to the higher refractive index of shorter wavelengths.
Perhaps that is why the CFA alone is not sufficient for near IR but it is for UV.
In any case, the individual spectral response of a camera/sensor varies somewhat... some are more or less affacted by UV/IR even with their filtration.
add a comment |
In terms of filtration there is not only the IR filter, but also the RGB CFA (color filter array) that lies directly over the sensor. These are absorptive filters and only pass the wavelengths they are designed to. I.e. adequate UV filtration is provided by the RGB Bayer array (or similar).
I have read that silicon photodiodes (pixels) are more sensitive/reactive to IR than they are to UV. This is also probably due, at least in part, to the higher refractive index of shorter wavelengths.
Perhaps that is why the CFA alone is not sufficient for near IR but it is for UV.
In any case, the individual spectral response of a camera/sensor varies somewhat... some are more or less affacted by UV/IR even with their filtration.
In terms of filtration there is not only the IR filter, but also the RGB CFA (color filter array) that lies directly over the sensor. These are absorptive filters and only pass the wavelengths they are designed to. I.e. adequate UV filtration is provided by the RGB Bayer array (or similar).
I have read that silicon photodiodes (pixels) are more sensitive/reactive to IR than they are to UV. This is also probably due, at least in part, to the higher refractive index of shorter wavelengths.
Perhaps that is why the CFA alone is not sufficient for near IR but it is for UV.
In any case, the individual spectral response of a camera/sensor varies somewhat... some are more or less affacted by UV/IR even with their filtration.
answered Mar 29 at 21:54
Steven KerstingSteven Kersting
62918
62918
add a comment |
add a comment |
Traditional metal-oxide "diodes" register UV in very low portions.
Here is a chart for "high UV sensetive" cmos: https://www.cameraiq.ru/data/image/QE%20MicroVista%20UV.JPG
Deep UV is ~270-330
Near UV is 330-400
As you can see, even special cmos can actually reach only small part of bellow-380 UV, while simpler ones actually reach only 400+, wich is visible light
So yes and no, cmos can see UV, but they are much more sensitive in visible part of spectrum.
In everyday life, while not being somewhere your oncologist wan't be happy to be, UV filter will not make any visible difference in your image, simple blend will make much more effect under bright sun. There are stories about shooting in the mountains, where people find some usage from this filters, but ok, even sample photos from filter-makers, are good both with and without filter :-)
add a comment |
Traditional metal-oxide "diodes" register UV in very low portions.
Here is a chart for "high UV sensetive" cmos: https://www.cameraiq.ru/data/image/QE%20MicroVista%20UV.JPG
Deep UV is ~270-330
Near UV is 330-400
As you can see, even special cmos can actually reach only small part of bellow-380 UV, while simpler ones actually reach only 400+, wich is visible light
So yes and no, cmos can see UV, but they are much more sensitive in visible part of spectrum.
In everyday life, while not being somewhere your oncologist wan't be happy to be, UV filter will not make any visible difference in your image, simple blend will make much more effect under bright sun. There are stories about shooting in the mountains, where people find some usage from this filters, but ok, even sample photos from filter-makers, are good both with and without filter :-)
add a comment |
Traditional metal-oxide "diodes" register UV in very low portions.
Here is a chart for "high UV sensetive" cmos: https://www.cameraiq.ru/data/image/QE%20MicroVista%20UV.JPG
Deep UV is ~270-330
Near UV is 330-400
As you can see, even special cmos can actually reach only small part of bellow-380 UV, while simpler ones actually reach only 400+, wich is visible light
So yes and no, cmos can see UV, but they are much more sensitive in visible part of spectrum.
In everyday life, while not being somewhere your oncologist wan't be happy to be, UV filter will not make any visible difference in your image, simple blend will make much more effect under bright sun. There are stories about shooting in the mountains, where people find some usage from this filters, but ok, even sample photos from filter-makers, are good both with and without filter :-)
Traditional metal-oxide "diodes" register UV in very low portions.
Here is a chart for "high UV sensetive" cmos: https://www.cameraiq.ru/data/image/QE%20MicroVista%20UV.JPG
Deep UV is ~270-330
Near UV is 330-400
As you can see, even special cmos can actually reach only small part of bellow-380 UV, while simpler ones actually reach only 400+, wich is visible light
So yes and no, cmos can see UV, but they are much more sensitive in visible part of spectrum.
In everyday life, while not being somewhere your oncologist wan't be happy to be, UV filter will not make any visible difference in your image, simple blend will make much more effect under bright sun. There are stories about shooting in the mountains, where people find some usage from this filters, but ok, even sample photos from filter-makers, are good both with and without filter :-)
answered Mar 30 at 18:59
Stanislav OrlovStanislav Orlov
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Possible duplicate of is uv filter a must?
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:34
1
Related: Is a UV Filter required/recommended for lens protection? and Are there any downsides to using a good-quality UV filter? and What effect does a UV filter provide? and Is a UV filter better for lens protection than a protector filter?
– Michael C
Mar 28 at 15:39