Hi,cheeyuin
Why not if someday we can achieve iso 12800 with NO NOISE.At the last pc fare fujifilm has one capable of iso 12800 but noise intro many colours in dark images.Nikon D3 boast of even iso 25600? but it seems its use even the infra portion of the spectrum to achieve that.Down the lane perhaps we may have iso25600 in ordinary camera at normal light and thats the time we astrographer will celebrate!Thanks.
superiorstream wrote:Hi,cheeyuin
Why not if someday we can achieve iso 12800 with NO NOISE.At the last pc fare fujifilm has one capable of iso 12800 but noise intro many colours in dark images.Nikon D3 boast of even iso 25600? but it seems its use even the infra portion of the spectrum to achieve that.Down the lane perhaps we may have iso25600 in ordinary camera at normal light and thats the time we astrographer will celebrate!Thanks.
Nikon's D3 ISO25,600 pales in comparison with the 1D MkIV with ISO 102,400. This is 2 stops more sensitive than Nikon's D3.
Hi,
1DM4 is a high performance DSLR which is not needed in Astrophotography. Too expensive to get it just for astro use. IMHO, if need good image quality, a 5D or 5DM2 is more than enough.
Anyway, ISO is important only in normal photography, but not that importance in Astrophotography. Also, increase ISO is actually increase the amplification of the signal output from the sensor before the signal get digitize... the sensitivity of a sensor does not change.
Have a nice day.
Yang Weixing "The universe is composed mainly of hydrogen and ignorance."
I think the basic differences and advantage of 1D MkIV over 5DMk II are higher "fps" for action photos and higher focus points . These do not translate into a better camera for AP.
Kochu/29-10-09
for nikon 3ds, the sensor has a huge improvement, the " photon pots " has been enlarge from 5nm to 8 nm...representing 50% more genuine light sensitivity....should be a great boost for astro photo in terms of reducing exposure time
Bearing in mind that both Nikon D3s and Canon 1D Mk4 are designed for photojournalists, the additional functions available (and cost) may be a bit overkill for Astrophotography.
[80% Steve, 20% Alfred] ------- Probability of Clear Skies = (Age of newest equipment in days) / [(Number of observers) * (Total Aperture of all telescopes present in mm)]