Hi. I would be grateful of some clarification of my understanding of the following, from
http://theory.uchicago.edu/~ejm/pix/20d/tests/noise/noise-p4.html"Also, for cameras with a bias offset of black (e.g. 1024 on 14-bit Canon raw files), the offset should be removed from both the image and the flat field before doing the division (this will be done automatically if we subtract a pattern read noise
template from both images since the template will also be offset and the bias will cancel out). In equations, the manipulation to be done to remove PRNU is
corrected image = L*(image - offset)/(flatfield - offset)
where if desired one can substitute the pattern read noise template for the constant offset in order to remove pattern noise at the same time."
It seems to me that the master 'bias' created from very short exposure DSLR frames is in fact a fixed pattern template with random read noise zeroed in quadrature.
Given that dark frames of short duration (120 seconds) taken at low sensor temperatures (using a temperature regulated cold finger cooling modification) are dominated by the fixed pattern component of read noise, subtraction of a fixed pattern template (DSLR bias frame) should be adequate to produce a reliable master dark with fewer dark frames than for 'hot' DSLR sensors, where thermal noise is dominant and temperature varies considerably.
I notice that a bias/fixed pattern subtracted (10 frames) master dark at 11C looks good, except that dark scaling factors during calibration with Optimization selected are way too high - Optimization must be deselected - the processed image looks OK.
I can't see a reason to take lots of dark frames with a cooled CMOS sensor, particularly where sensor temperature is conservatively within +/-1C of set point temperature at any time, and conceivably, much better than that - say +/-0.5 maximum. The heat extraction capabilities of a cold finger mod are quite aggressive, and provides stable and consistent temperature regulation.
Is there a good reason to take more than 10 darks to achieve a reliable sampling of the thermal noise when using a regulated cooling system for a DSLR, if the fixed pattern noise can be effectively removed and thermal noise is consistent?
The difference is 30minutes of acquiring darks as opposed to several hours - if there is a better way, don't keep it a secret.
Image details...
11C - CMOS set point temperature
Top center - bias/fixed pattern calibrated (subtracted) dark frame
Bottom left - raw dark frame
Bottom right - raw bias/fixed pattern frame