A 35 mm lens set to f/8; the diameter of the seven-sided entrance pupil, the virtual image of the opening in the iris diaphragm, is 4.375 mm

In optics, a diaphragm is a thin opaque structure with an opening (aperture) at its center. The role of the diaphragm is to stop the passage of light, except for the light passing through the aperture. Thus it is also called a stop (an aperture stop, if it limits the brightness of light reaching the focal plane, or a field stop or flare stop for other uses of diaphragms in lenses). The diaphragm is placed in the light path of a lens or objective, and the size of the aperture regulates the amount of light that passes through the lens. The centre of the diaphragm's aperture coincides with the optical axis of the lens system.

Most modern cameras use a type of adjustable diaphragm known as an iris diaphragm, and often referred to simply as an iris.

See the articles on aperture and f-number for the photographic effect and system of quantification of varying the opening in the diaphragm.

Contents

Iris diaphragms versus other types [link]

Six-blade iris diaphragm
File:Iris Diaphragm.gif
Nine-blade iris
Pentacon 2.8/135 lens with 15-blade iris
File:RotatingDiaphragm Derr1906.png
A Zeiss rotating diaphragm, 1906.[1] One diaphragm with five apertures.

A natural optical system that has a diaphragm and an aperture is the human eye. The iris is the diaphragm, and the opening in the iris of the eye (the pupil) is the aperture. An analogous device in a photographic lens is called an iris diaphragm.

In the early years of photography, a lens could be fitted with one of a set of interchangeable diaphragms [1], often as brass strips known as Waterhouse stops or Waterhouse diaphragms. The iris diaphragm in most modern still and video cameras is adjusted by movable blades, simulating the iris of the eye.

The diaphragm usually has two to eight blades, depending on price and quality of the device in which it is used. Straight blades result in polygon shape of the diaphragm opening, while curved blades improve the roundness of the iris opening. In a photograph, the number of blades that the iris diaphragm has can be guessed by counting the number of spikes converging from a light source or bright reflection. For an odd number of blades, there are twice as many spikes as there are blades.

In case of an even number of blades, the two spikes per blade will overlap each other, so the number of spikes visible will be the number of blades in the diaphragm used. This is most apparent in pictures taken in the dark with small bright spots, for example night cityscapes. Some cameras, such as the Olympus XA or lenses such as the MC Zenitar-ME1, however, use a two-bladed diaphragm with right-angle blades creating a square aperture.

Similarly, out-of-focus points of light (circles of confusion) appear as polygons with the same number of sides as the aperture has blades. If the blurred light is circular, then it can be inferred that the aperture is either round or the image was shot "wide-open" (with the blades recessed into the sides of the lens, allowing the interior edge of the lens barrel to effectively become the iris).

The shape of the iris opening has a direct relation with the appearance of the blurred out-of-focus areas in an image called Bokeh. A rounder opening produces softer and more natural out-of-focus areas.

Some modern automatic point-and-shoot cameras do not have a diaphragm at all, and simulate aperture changes by using an automatic ND filter.[2] Unlike a real diaphragm, this has no effect on depth of field.

History [link]

File:Diaphragm Wall1889.png
Dictionary entry for Diaphragm in the 1889 Wall's Dictionary of Photography[3]

In 1762, Leonhard Euler[4] says with respect to telescopes that, "it is necessary likewise to furnish the inside of the tube with one or more diaphragms, perforated with a small circular aperture, the better to exclude all extraneous light."

In 1867, Dr. Désiré van Monckhoven, in one of the earliest books on photographic optics,[5] draws a distinction betweens stops and diaphragms in photography, but not in optics, saying:

"Let us see what takes place when the stop is removed from the lens to a proper distance. In this case the stop becomes a diaphragm.
* In optics, stop and diaphragm are synonyms. But in photographic optics they are only so by an unfortunate confusion of language. The stop reduces the lens to its central aperture; the diaphragm, on the contrary, allows all the segments of the lens to act, but only on the different radiating points placed symmetrically and concentrically in relation to the axis of the lens, or of the system of lenses (of which the axis is, besides, in every case common)."

This distinction was maintained in Wall's 1889 Dictionary of Photography (see figure), but disappeared after Ernst Abbe's theory of stops unified these concepts.

According to Rudolph Kingslake,[6] the inventor of the iris diaphragm is unknown. Others credit Joseph Nicéphore Niépce for this device, around 1820. Mr. J. H. Brown, a member of the Royal Microscopical Society, appears to have invented a popular improved iris diaphragm by 1867.[7]

Kingslake has more definite histories for some other diaphragm types, such as M. Noton's adjustable cat eye diaphragm of two sliding squares in 1856, and the Waterhouse stops of John Waterhouse in 1858.

References [link]

  1. ^ Louis Derr, Photography for students of physics and chemistry London: The Macmillan Co., 1906
  2. ^ https://chdk.wikia.com/wiki/CameraFeatures
  3. ^ E. J. Wall, A Dictionary of Photography for the Amateur and Professional Photographer, New York: E. & H. T. Anthony & Co., 1889
  4. ^ Leonhard Euler, "Precautions to be used in the Construction of Telescopes. Necessitiy of blackening the Inside of Tubes. Diaphragms." 1762, in Letters of Euler on different subjects in physics and philosophy. Addressed to a German princess, Vol. II, Henry Hunter, D.D. (ed.), London, 1802,
  5. ^ Désiré van Monckhoven, Photographic Optics: Including the Description of Lenses and Enlarging Apparatus, English translation, London: Robert Hardwicke, 1867
  6. ^ Rudolf Kingslake, A History of the Photographic Lens, London: Academic Press, 1989
  7. ^ J. Henle, W, Keferstein, and G. Meissner, Bericht über die Fortschritte der Anatomie und Physiologie im Jahre 1867, Liepzip: C. F. Winter'sche Verlagshandlung, 1868.

See also [link]


https://wn.com/Diaphragm_(optics)

Iris (1987 film)

Iris is a 1987 Netherlands film directed by Mady Saks and starring Monique van de Ven.

Plot

A young woman, Iris, runs away to the big city on her eighteenth birthday. She moves in with an architect and decides to become a veterinarian. With an inheritance she buys an existing clinic in a backwoods town where Iris is leered at by the men, scorned by the women. Cruel jokes and gossip eventually lead to violence.A local thug breaks in her house while she is out. When she returns home late night, he attacks her, drag her to the wooden stairs, ties her hands, stretch her legs wide apart and ties to the railing of stairs and rapes her brutally.

References

External links

  • Iris at the Internet Movie Database

  • Iris (EP)

    Iris is Miranda Sex Garden's second release, and first EP.

    Track listing

  • "Lovely Joan" – 2:40
  • "Falling" – 5:39
  • "Fear" – 7:07
  • "Blue Light" – 6:30
  • "Iris" – 7:18

  • Dirty Epic

    "Dirty Epic" is a 1994 single by Underworld. The track was originally released in an instrumental form as "Dirty" in 1992, credited to the group's short-lived alias, Lemon Interupt. It was reworked with lyrics for their 1994 album, dubnobasswithmyheadman, and was released as a single in the USA on 18 July 1994.

    The original Lemon Interupt mixes "Dirty" and "Dirty Guitar" were included on the "Dirty Epic" single, now credited to Underworld.

    Track listing

    All tracks written, mixed and produced by Rick Smith, Karl Hyde and Darren Emerson unless otherwise noted.

    12": Junior Boys' Own / JBO 7-12 (UK, 1992)

    Released under the name Lemon Interupt.

  • "Dirty" - 11:14
  • "Minniapolis" - 9:07
  • "Minniapolis Airwaves" - 3:05
  • CD: Wax Trax! / TVT 8725-2V (US, 1994)

  • "Dirty Epic (Jed The Fish Edit)" – 4:10
  • "Dirty Epic (Album Version)" – 8:29
  • 12": DMD / DMD INT 001 (Germany, 1994)

  • "Dirty Epic (Dirty Guitar Mix)" – 10:00
  • "Dirty Epic (Dirty Mix)" – 11:14
  • 12": Intercord Tonträger GmbH / INT 193.019 (Germany, 1994)

    Dirty (disambiguation)

    Dirty may refer to:

    Places

  • Dirty Mountain, a mountain in Wyoming
  • Dirty Point, a mountain in New Mexico
  • Film

  • Dirty (film), a 2005 crime-drama
  • Music

    Artists and labels

  • Dirty (group), a rap duo from Alabama
  • Dirty Records, a New Zealand hip hop record label
  • Albums

  • Dirty (One-Eyed Doll album), 2012
  • Dirty (Sonic Youth album), 1992
  • Songs

  • "Dirty", a song by Korn from Issues
  • "Dirty", a song by Underworld, 1993
  • Computing and technology

  • Dirty (computer science), containing data which need to be written back to a larger memory
  • See also

  • Dirt (disambiguation)
  • "Dirrty", a 2002 song by Christina Aguilera
  • All pages beginning with "Dirty"
  • Dirrty

    "Dirrty" is a song by American singer Christina Aguilera featuring rapper Redman, taken from Aguilera's fourth studio album Stripped (2002). The song was written by Aguilera, Redman, Jasper Cameron, Balewa Muhammad, and Dana Stinson and was produced by Stinson under his production name Rockwilder and Aguilera. It is a hip hop and R&B track which talks about sexual activities.

    Aguilera wanted to release a seriously "down and dirty" song to eliminate her bubblegum pop singer image since her career began in 1999. Thus, RCA Records sent "Dirrty" to US mainstream stations in mid-September and released the song as a CD single via retailers from October to November 2002 as the lead single from Stripped to announce her new public image. A music video for "Dirrty" was directed by David LaChapelle and was released on September 30, 2002, depicting various sexual fetishes.

    "Dirrty" received mixed reviews from music critics, who were ambivalent towards its composition. The song was nominated a Grammy Award for Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals in 2003. "Dirrty" peaked at number 48 on the US Billboard Hot 100, becoming Aguilera's first single to chart outside the top twenty of the Hot 100. However, the single was an international success, peaking within the top ten charts of multiple countries including Canada, Germany, Hungary, Netherlands, Australia and the United Kingdom. Its music video generated controversy for its sexual content and was banned from Thai television stations.

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    Dekadence

    by: Tortaros

    Vrazdeni, nasili, brutalita kolem nas
    Nikdo to nezmeni, nikdo na to nema cas
    Vstavej a uc se nepratele zabijet
    Silnejsi prezije, takovy je proste svet
    Mel jsi dobre srdce, v dusi misto pro jine
    Pomohl jsi v nouzi - rikal sis : "A proc ne?"
    Ceho ses vsak dockal - zivot ti pres hubu dal
    Ted to ale zkonci - na druhou cestu ses dal
    Ref: Tak vstavej a uc se, strasne malo casu mas
    Tak vstavej a uc se, vsechno je to davno v nas
    Tak vstavej a uc se, silu v sobe objevis
    Tak vstavej a uc se, snad se smrti nebojis
    Jsi obet, tak kouke co zivot s tebou udelal
    Byls dobrej, uz nejsi, radeji ses toho vzdal
    Tva duse - ted cerna - zavrhla svedomi
    Tve srdce uz krasu davno vnimat neumi




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