ECC233 wrote in post #18824877
Looking to see if there is any experience that I can learn or steal from here. I have just bought a really cute 395 nm UV LED which I want to use for insect photography (as well as mineral and plant subjects). Before I start wasting a lot of time on understanding exposure algorithms, has anyone here done anything similar? In particular, what are the rules for setting exposure? I have not yet even taken a first test exposure, so all responses are welcome.
Thanks
Like mentioned above, you are still (mostly) imaging visible light. As the camera's exposure meter doesn't know if the light is being reflected or emitted by the object, it may still work and provide a usable exposure. I currently image TLC (thin layer chromatography) plates illuminated at 254 nm, with a Canon 6D and I only use the camera's exposure meter with good results. If I remember, I'll post some images tomorrow. That camera works well enough they I only hand-hold the camera. I use 2 lamps to evenly illuminate the plate since the inverse-square law still holds, and the brightness drops off due to distance and how the light spreads from the lamps. These images are used to document various experiments. I also image fluorescent fractions at 395 nm- I use these images to document instrument tests. I'll try to remember to post some of those, too. Again, the exposure meter does a good job for me. The lamp is very close to my experiment in these cases. If you move the lamp away from your object, you may need to use a tripod, and if the fluorescence gets dim, you may need to manually set the exposure,
The light you are using, 395 nm, is just outside the visible range. The lamp doesn't emits a single wavelength, but rather a range of wavelengths- you'll see a purple color from your lamp for that reason, and depending on lamp placement, you'll image that light as well.
I respectfully disagree that UV light is "beyond the ability to be viewed by a digital system" as I used to do it in an earlier job. You can have the "hot mirror" replaced in the camera with a UV band-pass filter- the sensor is unchanged: https://www.lifepixel.com …dslr-uv-camera-conversion
The lenses we use can also focus UV light, although some are better than others: https://www.lifepixel.com …-uv-camera-considerations
. Some people image in UV with just a filter, and take a long exposure on a tripod. They sell filters for microscope imaging for fluorescence, which emits in UV: https://www.semrock.com …escence-applications.aspx
the cameras used here are different than the ones we use, but the sensors are often the same.
Back to your question- Tonic water fluoresces nicely when excited by 395 nm light (quinine) and can look like it is radioactive.
Here's a list of fluorescent things- you have a long wave UV lamp: https://aiccm.org.au …als-relevant-conservation
Scorpions fluoresce (https://www.sciencedirect.com …cle/pii/S0003347211005069
), and flying squirrels were recently reported to have a pink glow: https://www.sciencedaily.com …/2019/02/190205102612.htm
. Scientists have genetically engineered fish to fluoresce (not to be confused with the fluorescence technique FISH
): https://www.glofish.com/
These fish were originally intended for research.