CYGM filter

In digital photography, the CYGM filter is an alternative color filter array to the Bayer filter (GRGB). It similarly uses a mosaic of pixel filters, of cyan, yellow, green and magenta, and so also requires demosaicing to produce a full-color image.

Example CYGM pattern
CYGM pattern on an image sensor in isometric perspective
CYGM sensor spectral response

Overview

CYGM gives more accurate luminance information than the Bayer filter, hence a wider dynamic range, but at the expense of color accuracy. This is because the cyan and yellow components of the colour filter array do not produce a true monochromatic yellow or cyan but are rather modifications of the filters used to absorb 'color'. Under the conventional trichromatic theory, a 'green' measurement is taken by placing a color filter which absorbs 'red' and 'blue' in front of the light sensor. A 'blue' measurement is taken with a 'green' and 'red' filter, and a 'red' measurement with a 'blue' and 'green' filter. RGB is therefore derived by using 2 color filters for each measurement. This means in practice that much of the light that falls upon the sensor array is absorbed by the filters (which typically employ dyes to absorb light within a broad range of wavelengths). The CYGM color filter array differs from the standard Bayer filter by using only a single color filter for 3 of the 4 sensors.[1] This produces a broad spectral response and therefore makes measurements more accurate in respect to luminance (that is, taking measurements of how much light there is) but makes it more difficult to determine color information accurately. While 'green' is unaffected (produced with 2 color filters), color inaccuracy arises from the fact that the red and blue sensors (as found in the standard Bayer filter) are in effect conflated into 'magenta' and 'cyan' sensors. This is shown by a graph of the spectral response of the CYGM sensor.[2]

While the CYGM filter found widespread adoption in the early years of digital photography, at the time a rival of the now standard Bayer filter, it is now considered obsolete. CCDs that used it include the 3 megapixel Sony ICX252AK and ICS252AKF (which sampled in October 1999.[3])

CCDs with a CYGM color filter array were initially adopted by both Canon and Nikon when these companies transitioned from film photography to digital. Many Canon models of the 1999-2000 period, such as the PowerShot S10,[4] the Canon Digital IXUS S100 (June 2000),[5] and the Canon PowerShot G1 used sensors with this colour filter arrangement. Whereas Canon adopted the now standard Bayer filter across its entire range when it introduced the DSLR, Nikon continued to produce and sell a range of mid-range enthusiast digital cameras using CYGM sensors for a period of approximately 5 years. From the prominent Nikon Coolpix 995 (still used a decade later in specialist applications like microscopy) to the Nikon Coolpix 5700 (the last Nikon camera to use CYGM).

List of cameras with a CYGM colour filter array

CameraSensor sizeResolutionRelease date
Nikon Coolpix 35001/2.7"3.2 MP19 September 2002
Nikon Coolpix 43001/1.8"4.1 MP29 August 2002
Nikon Coolpix 45001/1.8"4.0 MP29 May 2002
Nikon Coolpix 57002/3"5.0 MP29 May 2002
Nikon Coolpix 25001/2.7"2.0 MP21 February 2002
Nikon Coolpix 50002/3"5.0 MP18 September 2001
Nikon Coolpix 8851/1.8"3.2 MP23 August 2001
Nikon Coolpix 7751/2.7"2.1 MP25 April 2001
Nikon Coolpix 9951/1.8"3.14 MP25 April 2001
Canon PowerShot Pro90 IS1/1.8"2.6 MP6 January 2001
Canon PowerShot G11/1.8"3.14 MP18 October 2000
Nikon Coolpix 8801/1.8"3.24 MP28 August 2000
Nikon Coolpix 9901/1.8"3.24 MP27 January 2000
Canon PowerShot S201/1.8"3.14 MP6 January 2000
Nikon Coolpix 8001/2.0"2.1 MP27 September 1999
Canon PowerShot S101/2.0"2.11 MP27 August 1999
Canon PowerShot A501/3.0"1.2 MP30 March 1999
Canon PowerShot A5 ZOOM1/3.0"0.7 MP18 February 1999
Nikon Coolpix 7001/2.0"2.11 MP15 February 1999
Nikon Coolpix 9501/2.0"2.11 MP15 February 1999
Nikon Coolpix 900S1/2.7"1.2 MP26 October 1998
Canon PowerShot A51/3.0"0.7 MP27 March 1998
Nikon Coolpix 9001/2.7"1.2 MP16 March 1998
Canon PowerShot Pro 701/2.0"1.5 MP27 February 1998
Canon PowerShot 3501/3.0"0.3 MP16 July 1997
Canon PowerShot 6001/3.0"0.5 MP13 May 1996

See also

References

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