As I see it you can reduce digital photography to a fundamental process of making electrons out of photons, and if you can do this more efficiently your signal to noise ratio increases, which is a good thing. When you think about it, there are many places to lose photons once they have entered the lens and before they hit the photo sites on the sensor:
1. My Canon 70-200mm f2.8II lens has 23 lenses. That's around 40± surfaces (some elements are glued together and become one I assume) from which the photons passing through the lens can reflect and therefore be lost. I assume modern coatings reduce this loss to a minimum, but still ....... As well, the light has to get through 23 pieces of glass of varying thicknesses- some are fluorite, or low-dispersion glass, but still, some transmission losses must occur here.
2 Then the reduced number of photons hits the various filters in front of the sensor. According to Canon's White paper, my 1DIV has in front of the sensor a dichroic mirror to reflect IR, a layer of IR absorbing glass, a horizontal low-pass filter, a "phase" layer to convert from linear to circular polarised light, and then a vertical low-pass filter. All of these must further reduce the number of photons getting through.
3. Finally, the remaining photons hit the sensor itself and I assume, the process of conversion to electrons is not 100% efficient. One reason for this is that there are gaps on the sensor between the sites. These gaps are getting smaller to the point that there are using the term "gapless" to refer to these sensors.
I once read that about 70% of the light that manages to get to the sensor is lost due to the filters in front and the less-than-perfect efficiency of the sensor itself. The total light lost is even higher because this figure does not include losses due to the lens itself.
I guess my question is- can we expect continued improvements in efficiency which will ultimately result in higher S/N ratios? Where are these improvements most likely to focused- in the lens, the sensor filters or the sensor itself? Are other sensor designs (back-lit, etc) more efficient and have we "hit the wall" with current CMOS sensors in modern DSLRs?







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