| Introduction | Modeling small pixels | Comparing the SNR of cameras with different resolutions | Real-life comparisons | Conclusion |
The argument above provides a method to compare cameras with different resolutions. A high-resolution camera can still be turned into a low-resolution camera by averaging its pixels.
In
order to compare all cameras and not just pairs, a reference resolution can be
chosen and equivalent SNRs at this resolution are computed. Let Nref
denote this reference resolution. Consider a camera with N Mpix. To
obtain an image with Nref pixels, N / Nref
pixels need to be averaged out to produce a single pixel in the output image,
so the noise decreases by a factor of
.
We then deduce that SNRref at resolution Nref
can be obtained from the nominal SNR (in dB) using the formula
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Notice that if the reference resolution Nref is very large, or if the initial sensor has a low resolution, the normalized SNR can actually be lower than the nominal SNR.