CBSE BOARD XII, asked by phenilbanerjee3112, 10 months ago

what is saturated warning​

Answers

Answered by MrPrinceX
1

hy here is the answer.......

  • We can measure drops of water falling into each glass until it is full and can no longer contain any additional water. When pixels are full and photons can no longer “fit” into the pixels, this is termed saturation. ... A yellow warning triangle with a Saturated Pixels message will be displayed.
Answered by rohitsharma2k613
0

Answer:

To understand saturation, imagine each pixel as a water glass and a photon as a drop of water. We can measure drops of water falling into each glass until it is full and can no longer contain any additional water. When pixels are full and photons can no longer “fit” into the pixels, this is termed saturation. Any one pixel can only collect 65,535 counts before it saturates.This is why your images should always stay within the range of 600 to 60,000 counts per pixel; the minimum being high enough to be statistically quantifiable over background while the maximum is well below the saturation point.You will receive three warnings when you saturate an image. The first will be a warning window which you will have to close by clicking “OK”.The second will be a white stripe across the top of the image which will indicate that the image contains saturated pixels. You cannot remove this. The stripe is not visible when images are loaded as a sequence, but will appear when opened into their own image window.The third warning will launch the Activity Window, a panel along the bottom of the screen that describes all events happening during an acquisition. A yellow warning triangle with a Saturated Pixels message will be displayed

Explanation:

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