Is there a file format that is better than ordinary formats for the result 
of combining photos with different resolutions?

I want to combine two photos, where one is a higher resolution image of the 
most interesting feature in another.  When viewing on a computer, I want to 
be able to zoom in to the interesting feature and see full detail or zoom 
out and see full context.

The obvious general approach would over sample the wide photo up to the 
resolution of the narrow photo, then combine them with a mask to force all 
but the edges of the inner photo to be used unblended.  That result would 
have far more pixels than it actually has content, but should be 
compressible to eliminate most of that waste.  Then a fairly fast computer 
with large ram could decompress it for viewing.

But is there a better way?  A format that more directly supports multiple 
resolutions?  Or a container file for multiple photos and a viewer that 
combines them on the fly.  I assume they would be pre-warped for better 
alignment and have an alpha channel for on the fly blending, but the 
resolution difference would be dealt with on the fly, up or (most often) 
down sampling each separately to the display resolution.

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