The Camera and the Influence of Digital Technology
In the study of the camera, digital technology influence comes
from a variety of different sources to give rise to modern
digital photographic capabilities. Some of these technologies
are then advanced in special niches to create new advances in
science. One of the best examples of this exchange of digital
technology is the CCD or Charge-coupled device. This is the
digital technology breakthrough that made the digital camera
possible.
When light strikes the CCD surface, it frees electrons to move
around and those electrons accumulate in capacitors. Those
electrons are "counted" at regular intervals by a circuit which
dumps the electrons from each point on the CCD surface. When all
of these measurements are combined, a picture can be instantly
reproduced as a "virtual mosaic" of the individual point
measurements. This is the picture we see. The more points of
measurement found on the CCD, the higher the "resolution" of the
resulting picture.
When building a highly specialized camera, digital technology
such as this opens new doors which are not possible with film
based technology.
In dentistry, an X-ray machine can be converted to a digital
camera with a CCD which is sensitive to the photons that make up
the X-ray spectrum. Instead of imprinting an image of X-ray on
film, developing the film and finally reviewing the tiny film
image, modern X-ray cameras can instantly display an X-ray image
on a computer screen as the CCD processes the array of photon
measurements. This not only saves time, but also produces no
waste in the form of exposed film and development chemicals. So
with this frequently used, specialized camera, digital
technology creates improvements in a dentist's practice and
protects the environment.
Another specialized camera that benefits from digital technology
is the telescope. Traditional cameras, mounted to telescopes
collect points of light and expose the film. This can provide
more sensitivity than the human eye to faint points of light,
but brighter points of light can also obscure fainter ones by
"washing out" the image. With the application of digital
technology the film camera is replaced by a digital camera using
a CCD. The CCD can continue to receive and measure photons
indefinitely. This means the process is a continuous measurement
in contrast to the more simple exposure of a piece of film.
Computers can then electronically filter out brighter sources of
light making possible the detection of very faint points of
light in the sky and even the study of celestial objects by the
detection of the shadows they cast instead of the light they
give off. By comparing the light collected over time, digital
technology also allows this digital camera to detect distant
objects by inferring their presence.
These are just two examples of how cameras are influenced by
digital technology. New applications and even new science can
result from such seemingly small advances in technologies that
don't seem to be related at all. Think on this the next time you
examine your own digital camera.