Hey there, I'm trying to understand whether or not a higher contrast in an image equals a higher resolution, in terms of the amount of actual data that is optically resolved, not the quality of the image.
I read: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minimum_resolvable_contrast
And this part of this forum: https://www.photo.net/discuss/threads/low-contrast-high-resolution-im-confused.194936/
An example I have is, if you have a bunch of tiny QR codes all crammed together in a blob, would they be able to be resolved better if there was more contrast in the overall image by a digital camera lens, or does it make no difference?
Obviously if the image was grey nothing would be resolved, so there has to be a contrast between black and white in order to retrieve data.
There are quite a few different answers in that forum, so I wouldnt mind hearing some fresh ones.
I read: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minimum_resolvable_contrast
And this part of this forum: https://www.photo.net/discuss/threads/low-contrast-high-resolution-im-confused.194936/
An example I have is, if you have a bunch of tiny QR codes all crammed together in a blob, would they be able to be resolved better if there was more contrast in the overall image by a digital camera lens, or does it make no difference?
Obviously if the image was grey nothing would be resolved, so there has to be a contrast between black and white in order to retrieve data.
There are quite a few different answers in that forum, so I wouldnt mind hearing some fresh ones.
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