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UltravioletPhotography

Evening primrose (Vis, UV, UVIVF, SWIR)


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Andy Perrin

This seems to be an evening primrose (of which there are a number of species) or something like that. It was photographed around midnight, so I suppose it is living up to the name.

 

Cameras: Sony A7S for visible, UV, and UVIVF, TriWave Ge-CMOS for SWIR (1500-1600nm)

 

Lighting: halogen for visible and SWIR, filtered Convoy S2+ for UV and UVIVF

 

Filters: for UV, S8612 1.75mm + UG11 2mm (although none was really needed since the torch is filtered also, but it's my standard stack)

for visible and UVIVF: BG38 2mm + Hoya UVIR cut

for SWIR: 1500nm long pass from Thorlabs (FEL1500)

 

Visible

post-94-0-64084300-1562094781.jpg

 

UV

post-94-0-55688000-1562094791.jpg

 

UVIVF

[note: do not give me any grief about the damn white balance. My EYES don't even see the same colors as the rest of the board, how do you expect me to get it right? I made it look pretty.]

post-94-0-78279500-1562094839.jpg

 

SWIR (1500-1600nm)

post-94-0-53050700-1562094897.png

 

The SWIR patterning is quite interesting as it has aspects of the UV pattern here too, but is not identical, as the SWIR shows a dark bulls-eye at the center which is not there in UV. Also the anthers are very reflective in the SWIR photo. We should probably keep in mind that this is just the 1500-1600nm SWIR band -- I have not investigated other sub-bands of SWIR yet:

post-94-0-09082000-1562095137.jpg

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Andy Perrin
Yeah, I thought that was the conical cells that people are always going on about in these parts?
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There could be some correlation of the dark areas in the SWIR images with higher water content levels. It may be interesting to photograph, in SWIR, a series of a given subject (e.g., a leaf) at different stages of hydration.
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Andy Perrin
Mark, I suggested that in the other thread (on daisy fleabane) but what’s stopping me is that the flower shrivels up as it dries which will make it hard to photograph petals.
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Yes most flowers will close or fall apart when they dry out. I have a collection of dry flowers now.

The one that stayed in place was my daffodils. But the wild ones are all gone now. You may be able to buy one.

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Andy, we can't give you any grief about the fluorescent WB

because we've never quite figured out what it "should" be. :D :D :D

We can standardize fluor WB if shot under certain conditions using the Target thingie,

but that's about it. So rest easy.

 

The Evening Primrose in UV shows iridescence on its 4-part stigma.

Conical cells are typically on petals or rays where they serve various functions.

That is a really good UV photo of this flower!

 

The SWIR signatures prove interesting-er and interesting-er the more you post.

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