• @WhiteOakBayou
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    502 months ago

    Would the grain show up in digital pictures as well or only on film? I know why it appears on film but the gnomes that work my cell phone camera won’t give me a straight answer.

    • @9point6
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      242 months ago

      I don’t think it would look the same, if it was a CMOS sensor, I think you’d see lots of bright white pixels

    • @SkidFace
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      182 months ago

      I’m not even sure it would show up on film either. But for CCD cameras (aka phone cameras and basically all modern cameras), 350 americium buttons buttons from a smoke detector in a wide “stew” that far away would produce nowhere near enough ionizing radiation to do that. On top of it, americium-241 is an alpha emitter, meaning that even if alpha particles reached the lens, the lens itself would block a good amount an alpha. This video gives a demo of a CCD without protection over it with americium and other various emitters :)

      https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=jFNvYA7731o

      • @9point6
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        32 months ago

        Aren’t CCDs going the way of the dinosaur even in phones now? I thought the whole industry had more or less shifted to CMOS sensors now?

        Very cool video regardless though

    • Stern
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      162 months ago

      IIRC radiation would cause grain on a cell phone camers.