| ▲ | Full Spectrum and Infrared Photography(timstr.website) | |||||||
| 26 points by alter_igel 4 days ago | 4 comments | ||||||||
| ▲ | NoiseBert69 22 minutes ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
You’re considering whether it would be possible - and perhaps quite elegant - to use an XY‑scanner to raster‑scan the end of an optical fiber across a prism, disperse the light, and then capture the resulting spectrum with a CCD line sensor. With that setup, each pixel on the line sensor would effectively record the full spectral content of the light at that scanned position, all in a single acquisition. | ||||||||
| ▲ | avidiax an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||
One thing I've wondered about is IR fluorescence photography. I've seen some examples in document forensics where a page that looks blank (or at least the ink is unrecognizably smudged) because of water exposure is completely legible with an infrared photo illuminated by UV. I suspect there must be a hidden world only visible in IR and UV (and long-wave IR, e.g. "thermal"). | ||||||||
| ▲ | fraywing 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
This is really cool -- pedantically, I've always thought "full spectrum" is actually misleading from a traditional photographic sense. Like IR + visible light + UV != full spectrum. I'd love to see post-processed imagery of every-day life through an extended view of broader EM energy (similar to astrophotography)... like what does a city scene look like with x-rays and microwaves included? Side note: have always loved this image https://imgur.com/NZjWfWT of rainbows with UV and IR visible. | ||||||||
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