
 

KH 10ex3.6 IRSE
In 2006 Canon is introducing a new family of portable HDTV lenses
for EFP, ENG, and a range of corporate and business industrial applications.
In so doing, an important hierarchy in HD optics is being created.
It is important because of the highly innovative developments by
the world’s major professional video manufacturers in their
recent introduction of a diverse range of new low-cost tapeless
HD camcorders and tape-based HDV professional camcorders. Various
design strategies have been adopted by the manufacturers to decisively
drive down the costs of these HD acquisition systems. They include
different image format sizes, subsampled imagers, and contemporary
digital recording techniques. In support of these products Canon
is designing an entire new family of cost-effective HD lenses that
seek to match both the performance and the costs of these diverse
and still-emerging HD acquisition systems. To distinguish this level
of lens within the overall Canon HD optical hierarchy they are being
identified by the logo HDgc – to clearly differentiate them
from the already established high performance HDxs line of 2/3-inch
portable lenses.
These new acquisition systems have been developed in response to
the broadcast industry’s rapidly growing interest in transitioning
to HDTV Newsgathering, HD reality shows, and other lower-budget
HD productions. They also directly address the increasing adoption
of HD digital origination by the growing independent filmmaking
market sector. In addition, they are anticipated to foster growing
interest in HD within the broad B2B market sectors. To support this
extensive flexibility in HD acquisition systems, the new HDgc family
will include 2/3-inch, 1/2-inch, and 1/3-inch lenses.
The KH10ex3.6 is the widest angle of view (capable of some 88 degrees
horizontally) portable HDTV production lens within the 1/2-inch
image format sector of the HDgc family. This particular lens is
intended for broadcast and cable news photographers having as their
foremost priority really wide angle shooting with minimum chromatic
aberrations and low geometric distortion (at the widest angle) –
contained within a lightweight mobile package. It was specifically
designed for the new HD XDCAM camcorders of Sony, which utilize
three 1/2-inch 1440-element CCD imagers. It is an important member
of the emerging family in terms of facilitating HD imaging with
equivalent operational capabilities as the established 2/3-inch
SDTV systems.
ABOUT THIS LENS
The KH10ex3.6 utilized breakthrough technologies and powerful computer-aided
design techniques to produce a very wide-angle HDTV lens with an
excellent performance-cost optimization. It is a design directly
responding to the expressed creative desires of broadcasters and
HD producers for low-cost HD acquisition system.
The KH10ex3.6 represents a fine compromise between the demands for
mobility in a handheld HDTV camera system and the high imaging performance
requirements for HDTV production. The requisite optimization strategies
to achieve this balance sought a high MTF over the entire image
plane, minimization of chromatic aberrations, and maximization of
image contrast. Preservation of a high MTF at the wider-angle focal
lengths (where scene detail can be particularly high) was a special
priority.
Relative light distribution was optimized for the more open aperture
settings and this uniformity of brightness across the image plane
combines with the high contrast and excellent picture sharpness
to produce vividly clear HD pictures. Contrast was extended by careful
control of black reproduction – with optical and mechanical
design innovations that substantially reduced flare, veiling glare,
and any internal reflections. Tight control of the geometric distortion
at wide-angle settings constituted another central design imperative.
The lens spectral transmittance characteristic was closely coordinated
with that of all of the major portable cameras to ensure adherence
to the HDTV colorimetric standards and to additionally support flexible
creative control of color reproduction.
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