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Does anything but amber and blue contribute to "color temperature"?

Asher Kelman

OPF Owner/Editor-in-Chief
How do color meters take into account the iso-effect line in the Plankian locus plot of color temp on a map of colors.

533px-PlanckianLocus.png


Source

As you can see there are a lot of different chromaticities represented at each iso temp line perpendicular to the temperature axis. For example, it appears that a temperature of 10,000 degrees K could be seen in a color varying from green through cyan and blue to magenta! So do the meters actually isolate amber-blue from magenta-cyan? Or is the magenta cyan also used in determining color temp? Also are there meters that give the relative proprtions of cyan and blue in the light too to qualify the color temperature beyond amber to blue?

Asher
 

Jerome Marot

Well-known member
Also are there meters that give the relative proprtions of cyan and blue in the light too to qualify the color temperature beyond amber to blue?

I am not really sure about your question, but the meter in my camera (which is basically a software implementation of the old Minolta Thermocolorimeter III) gives the color temperature in ° Kelvin and a color compensation value on the green-magenta axis .
 

Asher Kelman

OPF Owner/Editor-in-Chief
I am not really sure about your question, but the meter in my camera (which is basically a software implementation of the old Minolta Thermocolorimeter III) gives the color temperature in ° Kelvin and a color compensation value on the green-magenta axis .

Thanks for your response. Is it a Sony camera you have? Also where did you get this interesting information. I'm so impressed that they used all that experience and it was not wasted! Talk about pedigree!

Asher
 

Jerome Marot

Well-known member
Yes, Minolta and Sony DSLRs have this capability (I am not entirely sure about the low end of Sony cameras). I think that Minolta advertised it at the time they issued the 7D. Their second DSLR, the 5D, also has it.
 
How do color meters take into account the iso-effect line in the Plankian locus plot of color temp on a map of colors.

Hi Asher,

I guess it depends on the actual implementation, but probably many will use a somewhat dumbed down approximation. Color temperature is not a color, but the total integrated power spectrum of a blackbody radiator, or similar source. Sampling that total spectral emission with just 2 or 3 spectral band filters, or averaging between three color coordinates will remain an approximation (particularly inaccurate with spikey spectra, e.g. fluorescent tubes). Only a spectrophotometer can calculate an accurate colortemperature, because the whole spectral emission will be integrated at narrow intervals. Narrower intervals will get more accurate estimates of spikey spectra.

As you can see there are a lot of different chromaticities represented at each iso temp line perpendicular to the temperature axis. For example, it appears that a temperature of 10,000 degrees K could be seen in a color varying from green through cyan and blue to magenta!

The diagram you showed is IMHO not a very good illustration, because the Isotherm lines are not perpendicular to the Planckian locus.

What we have available in our Raw converter software is a Correlated Color Temperature (CCT) control. The Planckian locus is marked on the Color temperature scale, and the Isotherms are marked on the Tint scale.

So do the meters actually isolate amber-blue from magenta-cyan? Or is the magenta cyan also used in determining color temp? Also are there meters that give the relative proprtions of cyan and blue in the light too to qualify the color temperature beyond amber to blue?

AFAIK, there is only one colormeter, the Sekonic C-500, that also has sensors specifically for digital photography. It outputs a color temperature plus a color correction (CC) filter to correct for Magenta/Cyan. Do remember that these meters are used to allow a filtration/adjustment of the light before exposure, so it doesn't output a tint correction but a filter correction.

Cheers,
Bart
 

Asher Kelman

OPF Owner/Editor-in-Chief
Hi Asher,

I guess it depends on the actual implementation, but probably many will use a somewhat dumbed down approximation. Color temperature is not a color, but the total integrated power spectrum of a blackbody radiator, or similar source. Sampling that total spectral emission with just 2 or 3 spectral band filters, or averaging between three color coordinates will remain an approximation (particularly inaccurate with spikey spectra, e.g. fluorescent tubes). Only a spectrophotometer can calculate an accurate colortemperature, because the whole spectral emission will be integrated at narrow intervals. Narrower intervals will get more accurate estimates of spikey spectra.



The diagram you showed is IMHO not a very good illustration, because the Isotherm lines are not perpendicular to the Planckian locus.

What we have available in our Raw converter software is a Correlated Color Temperature (CCT) control. The Planckian locus is marked on the Color temperature scale, and the Isotherms are marked on the Tint scale.



AFAIK, there is only one colormeter, the Sekonic C-500, that also has sensors specifically for digital photography. It outputs a color temperature plus a color correction (CC) filter to correct for Magenta/Cyan. Do remember that these meters are used to allow a filtration/adjustment of the light before exposure, so it doesn't output a tint correction but a filter correction.

The Gossen color meter doesn't have that extra sensor for digital photography but for me unless one is dealing with tungsten or odd fluorescent lights and wants to correct perfectly before taking the picture, the reference to the needs of film photography is pretty close to what's also needed for digital sensors. After all, we may want to finesse the color appearance anyway foe esthetic sensibilities of the photographer.

I happened to find a Gossen colorimeter on sale and hopefully it will help both my film and color photography by choosing filters to correct light beforehand. With digital, this may decrease color noise under some circumstances.

Maybe, this picture is better. The color temps are shown in mireds, the inverse of color temp x10-6.


Planckian-locus-in-mireds.png


"Close up of the Planckian locus in the CIE 1960 UCS, with the isotherms in mireds. Note the even spacing of the isotherms when using the reciprocal temperature scale, and compare
with the similar figure below. The even spacing of the isotherms on the locus implies that the mired scale is a better measure of perceptual color difference than the temperature scale."

See the original source for further details.

I've moved to becoming "color aware" in film at least. So that's the motivation for acquiring both a color meter and also mired filters to adjust color temp, the blue-amber axis and cyan-magenta, the tint quality of the light.

The downside is that any glass, resin or polyester in the light path of the incoming image is going to have some cost in terms of degradation.

Asher
 

Doug Kerr

Well-known member
Hi, Asher,

How do color meters take into account the iso-effect line in the Plankian locus plot of color temp on a map of colors.

If the basic sensor system of the meter can truly determine the chromaticity of the light (perhaps, at one stage, expressed in CIE x-y or u-v coordinates), then the correlated color temperature (CCT) and the "Planckian offset" (the distance along the "iso-temperature line" from the point on the Planckian locus whose temperature is taken to be the CCT to the actual point representing the chromaticity of interest) can be unambiguously determined (and presumably reported by the meter, if it offers that form of its result).

Recall that both those factors are needed to specify the chromaticity of the incident light - what we need to do the best practical approximation of ideal white balance color correction. The correlated color temperature (CCT) of the light alone will not do it.

Some meters rigorously determine the chromaticity of the observed light. They are very complex, and conceptually determine the spectral density function of the light and then (numerically) multiply it by three different functions of wavelength and integrate to get the CIE X, Y, and Z coordinates, from which the x and y values (indicative of chromaticity) can be derived.

Moat meters, however measure the light through three different filters whose response curves are not those needed to do all this in a single operation (in fact, filters that would do that are not possible). Thus these meters give an approximation of chromaticity. The discrepancy is a manifestation of the broader issue of metameric error.

Keep in mind, however, that even knowing the actual chromaticity of the incident light is not actually enough to rigorously do white balance color correction. The rigorous process would require us to know:

• The spectrum of the incident light.

• The reflective spectrum of each region in the scene.

Clearly, working on that basis is not realistic for practical photography. So we use an approximation and "season to taste".

To get back to your question, for what it's worth, the plane whose axes are magenta vs. cyan and amber vs. blue is a true chromaticity plane. However, in general, its axes do not correspond well to CCT and Planckian Offset. It is used because it can be directly related to the working of our tricolor sensors.

Best regards,

Doug
 
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Doug Kerr

Well-known member
Hi, Bart,

The diagram you showed is IMHO not a very good illustration, because the Isotherm lines are not perpendicular to the Planckian locus.

That is because this chart is on the CIE x-y plane, whereas (as I am sure you know) the definition of the "iso-termperature" lines ("perpendicular to the local tangent of the Planckian locus at the temperature taken to be the correlated color temperature") is based on a plot on the u-v plane.

Best regards,

Doug
 
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Asher Kelman

OPF Owner/Editor-in-Chief
Hi, Bart,



That is because this chart is on the CIE x-y plane, whereas (as I am sure you know) the definition of the "iso-termperature" lines ("perpendicular to the local tangent of the Planckian locus at the temperature taken to be the coordinated color temperature") is based on a plot on the u-v plane.

Doug,

Could you explain the u-v plane?

Thanks,

Asher
 

Doug Kerr

Well-known member
Hi, Asher,

Could you explain the u-v plane?

We start with the CIE XYZ coordinate system, the basic scientific way to express color.

If we strip out luminance, we have the derived coordinates x and y, which together describe chromaticity.

We most commonly see chromaticity plotted on a chart with axes x and y (we most often see chromaticity gamuts of color spaces plotted on that coordinate system, for example, as well as the spectral "horseshoe" and the Planckian locus).

But the distance on this plane between points representing different chromaticities of interest do not give a consistent indication of the perceived difference in chromaticity difference.

To deal with this, the CIE later developed two transforms of the x-y plane, the u-v plane and the u'-v' plane, which of course use different pairs of coordinates (u and v, u' and v'). They each in their own way approach the elusive goal of a plot of chromaticity in which distances consistently correspond to perceived chromaticity difference.

There is a simple linear transform between the x-y coordinates of any chromaticity and its u-v or u'-v' coordinates.

Any one of those planes is an equally-valid way to graphically present chromaticities.

This is an excellent presentation of this matter, with lovely illustrations:

http://www.efg2.com/Lab/Graphics/Colors/Chromaticity.htm

Again the relevance here comes from the basic concept of the coordinated color temperature (CCT) of a non-blackbody (non-Planckian) chromaticity. It is defined as "the color temperature of the point on the Planckian locus that is closest to the point for the chromaticity of interest".

But "closest" is a geometric concept. Thus, its meaning might differ depending on which coordinate system is used for the "plot" of chromaticity. In fact, the formal definition presumes the use of the CIE u-v coordinate system for making that determination. The aspiration is that by so doing, the Planckian chromaticity that confers the CCT will be the one that "looks most like" the chromaticity of interest. That aspiration is only partially fulfilled.

In closing, remember that only a chromaticity on the Planckian locus has an actual color temperature. Other chromaticities have a correlated color temperature (CCT). (I think I earlier called that the "coordinated color temperature" in error.)

Best regards,

Doug
 

Adrian Wareham

New member
Or, in short, it's the temperature necessary to generate a photon of that frequency. In a camera, the objective is to compensate for lighting with the color temperature you are putting into the camera, so a high number makes the camera think there is a lot of blue (hot/energetic) light in the exposure, and increases the gain on red instead, or reduces blue.

I know that's a very simplistic way of looking at it, but, without using too many long words (I was a physicist before a photographer) that's essentially what is happening.

I hope that's at least a little helpful. I can be absent minded.

-Adrian

edit: oh! And it applies to the full spectrum, but our eyes are so sensitive to green that increasing gain there could look odd, and reducing gain on blue will create orange (which shows up as changes mostly in the red of RGB).
 

Doug Kerr

Well-known member
Hi, Adrian,

Or, in short, it's the temperature necessary to generate a photon of that frequency.
That's perhaps a little too short. In fact, a body at some temperature emits photons over a continuous "spectrum" of frequency (the distribution by frequency depending on the nature of the body's surface and the temperature). The overall effect of that, visually, is a certain chromaticity.

So, the color temperature of a blackbody chromaticity is the temperature needed to make a black body generate photons whose distribution of frequency will be perceived as that chromaticity.

In a camera, the objective is to compensate for lighting with the color temperature you are putting into the camera, so a high number makes the camera think there is a lot of blue (hot/energetic) light in the exposure, and increases the gain on red instead, or reduces blue.

Well said.

I know that's a very simplistic way of looking at it, but, without using too many long words (I was a physicist before a photographer) that's essentially what is happening.
That part of your simplified description is in fact very useful.

Best regards,

Doug
 

Adrian Wareham

New member
You can relax. I just noticed the thread could use a quick "and this is what your camera is trying to do" post for those who haven't studied physics.

Materials like Silicon and Germanium have very interesting curves as they are both transparent to most thermal infra-red. So, as a group of thermal photons with various energies are excited into existence, they may pass through the material, leading to a prism effect at the surface when exiting, with many being reflected back inside due to the angle at the surface.

Inside stars, there are also materials made of "degenerate matter", where there are insufficient low-energy electrons to fill orbitals normally, resulting in all sorts of strange spectra.

Weird stuff.

-Adrian
 
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