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Moth Orchid - Phalaenopsis multispectral

Dr Klaus Schmitt

Well-known member
This series with an yellow-orange moth orchid was shot using my trusted UV-Nikkor 105mm using specialized filters on my full spectrum converted Panasonic Lumix GH5 with a modified Xenon flash as a light source.
Human vision, reflected UV, simulated bee and butterfly vision (left to right, top to bottom)

More is here: https://photographyoftheinvisiblewo...01/moth-orchid-phalaenopsis-in-reflected.html

173309152.Zh0Y9lq4.Phalaenopsis_VISUVBUBV_P1820305_c.jpg
 

Asher Kelman

OPF Owner/Editor-in-Chief
This series with an yellow-orange moth orchid was shot using my trusted UV-Nikkor 105mm using specialized filters on my full spectrum converted Panasonic Lumix GH5 with a modified Xenon flash as a light source.
Human vision, reflected UV, simulated bee and butterfly vision (left to right, top to bottom)

More is here: https://photographyoftheinvisiblewo...01/moth-orchid-phalaenopsis-in-reflected.html

173309152.Zh0Y9lq4.Phalaenopsis_VISUVBUBV_P1820305_c.jpg
My preference is the UV reflection!

But, Klaus, how did it come to be this lilac color in visible light? Was their a vote or that’s what the filter converts it too, or that’s the wavelength of the reflected light?

Asher
 

Dr Klaus Schmitt

Well-known member
Thanks guys!

Asher, that "UV color" is artificial, but appears when there is some long wave UV reflection around 380-385nm. It is a whitebalanced image using SPECTRALON (R) but those "colors" strongly depend on teh Bayer pattern a chip manufacturer has used, more precisely their transmission in the UV and the reaction of the siicon photo diodes underneath. A rather complex thing it is. I have tested that with my LUMIXes over the years using narrowband UV light by using a monochromator and these are the resulting artificial "UV colors" then. I have that explained in more detail: HERE

original.jpg
 
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