Get rid of all the photographic analogies the term "shot noise" evokes. The term "shot" here initially came from... a gunshot analogy.
See it as a dry description of the behaviour of the measuring/sampling process.
You can do many intersting things with "shot noise" - that one is, I believe, one of the best teaching experiment on the topic (although it could probably be done with other tools nowadays)
http://www.math.temple.edu/~cmartoff/teaching/ph4796_10/shot_noise/AJP000554.pdf
and even more exotic stuff such as this one
http://europa.agu.org/?view=article&uri=/journals/gl/GL010i001p00005.xml
On a personal basis, I confess that one of the big shocks of my life was to discover that knowing the characteritics of "noise" could yield useful results . Something that I saw as mere measurement pain and trash suddenly became very beautiful.
Pierre,
Thanks for the links.I'll study them when I have time.
On relfection, I've decided that my speculations on the amount of shot noise existing in the light before it reaches the sensor are philosophically unsound.
We can never be certain about the existence of
anything prior to its detection. We can speculate upon its existence and draw inferences about its character, but reality is in the detection.
Therefore I have to concede the point that shot noise cannot exist prior to the detection of the photons. It is nonsense to try to imagine that it might. (Hope I haven't misled anyone
).
To get back to the purpose of the thread, which was an attempt to find out if the purported increased DR of the D7000 is real and significant, I have now received my D7000 with 24-105/F4 lens, and have made some preliminary comparisons with my 15mp Canon 50D.
The message from some of the more technically-minded members of the forum was that such claimed increases in DR for the D7000, by DXOMark, would be irrelevant because shot noise is already the dominant noise at the extreme end of the DR range in current DSLRs.
The results of my preliminary tests indicate that such a view is incorrect, false, untrue, and plain wrong, to put it mildly.
Of course, I can't speak for the characteristics of every DSLR camera. I can test only the cameras I own. My latest Canon camera is the 50D, and
that's the camera the D7000 will replace (at least much of the time).
The Canon D60 might be very marginally better than the 50D in some respects, but so marginally better it's of no significance. For example, the maximum DR of the 50D is 11.4 EV, and the maximum DR of the 60D is 11.5 EV (according to DXOMark). An irrelevant difference.
Comparing the 50D with the D7000, DXO imply in their graphs that the D7000 should have at least similar image quality in the 13th stop as the D50 in the 11th stop. To be precise, the D7000 maximum DR is 13.87 EV and that for the 50D 11.4 EV.
If I ever take the trouble to address this issue more precisely and repeat the test, I'll get some results for the D7000 at 13.67 stops, and for the 50D at 11.33 stops, but for now 13 stops compared with 11 stops should be sufficient for a fair idea.
You should be able to see that the D7000, at 2 stops
less exposure than the 50D, actually provides slightly
greater detail than the 50D shot at 2 stops
more exposure.
This is a remarkable acheivement for Nikon, and a remarkable acheivement for the accuracy and practical relevance of DXO testing procedures.
I'm not going to show you comparisons between the D7000 10th stop and the 50D 10th stop here, but believe me, one is of usable quality and the other ain't.