In a message dated 3/10/2005 12:22:55 PM Pacific Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Mar 10, 2005, at 11:20 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> I thought the reason you could spot dirt better was what someone said, 
> at a
> smaller aperture you have a smaller, more concentrated cone of light 
> than at a
> wide aperture. Like those pictures you see with the drawings of the 
> cone
> behind the lens.
>
> But now that I think about it more, why should more concentrated light 
> reveal
> dirt better? Maybe shorter shadows? So one can pinpoint where it is? 
> Or is
> does that make no sense?

You have it right in your first paragraph above ... as I and others 
have stated, it's a matter of a small aperture acting like a point 
light source and a large aperture acting like a broad light source.

The dust particles are sitting on the filter/lens array some distance 
from the actual sensor. The imaging of dust particles is a matter of 
how they cast a shadow under these two light sources.

I rigged a little demonstration picture to show how a broad light 
source and a point light source changes the appearance of shadows, 
constructed of an olive on a toothpick, a notepad, a plastic bag, and a 
flashlight:

http://homepage.mac.com/godders/shadows.jpg

Note how the plastic bag on the left acts light a broad light source, 
spreading the flashlight beam, and how the shadow on the notebook is 
indistinct and soft? On the right, the unfettered flashlight beam is a 
point source and images a hard, sharp shadow.

This is exactly what's happening when you see dust at small apertures 
and no dust at large apertures.

Godfrey
========
Thanks, Godfrey, and, what do you know, I wasn't that far off.

Marnie :-)

Reply via email to