CanonNews / Sunday, February 4, 2018 / Categories: Canon Patents Stacked Sensor Patent Application When you stack or laminate a processing substrate and a sensor substrate as you can imagine you have heat generated from the processing substrate that can affect your image quality, especially in low light, or long exposure conditions. Usually we use long exposure noise reduction which takes a second image (a dark frame) after your first image and removes the noise by subtraction. This noise is called by what is called "dark current" and is usually purple-ish blobs in corners of your images, which shows where there was a heat source. This of course is compounded when you have a processing chip stuck to the back of your sensor. As we noted last week, canon is looking at improving this, first by eliminating as much heat as possible mechanically via heat sinks and other methods, and this week we find another application dealing with the same phenomena. A stacked sensor may have the following heatmap; what this patent application does is split up the sensor into various heat zones and provides specific correction for each zone. it's not a replacement for LENR (long exposure noise reduction), however a method of reducing the noise from a more problematic level. Japan Patent Application 2018-019227 Another curved sensor patent application from Canon Canon Broadcast Lenses at the Superbowl Print 5330 Tags: Canon Sensor Patent Applications Related articles Macquarie University supported by Canon Australia unveils The Huntsman Telescope Canon takes aim at #1 in mirrorless Canon's Number 1 (sort of) Canon celebrates the 35th anniversary of the EOS system next month Press Text leaks for the Canon RF 1200mm F8L IS USM Please enable JavaScript to view the comments powered by Disqus.blog comments powered by Disqus