How Do Image Sensors Convert Light into Electrical Signals?

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Image sensors convert light into electrical signals by splitting incoming light into RGB values and measuring their intensities. In CCD sensors, light excites electrons, allowing them to accumulate as charge in photosensitive regions, while CMOS sensors use photodiodes or phototransistors that conduct based on light intensity. The RGB signals produced by these sensors are not direct outputs; they are derived from a matrix multiplication of the sensor outputs to ensure accurate color reproduction. This process is crucial for proper color accuracy in digital imaging, contrasting with the less precise color quality of traditional film. Understanding these mechanisms is essential for grasping how image sensors function in capturing and processing images.
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I understand the role of an image sensor is to convert incoming light into electrical charge (by splitting the light into RGB values and then measuring the intensities of each), but how does this occur?

I know the answer is very basic (the sort of sensors I'm talking about are CCDs and CMOS). Am I correct in thinking that the incoming light strikes the material, excites some of the electrons into the conduction band which then makes them free to travel in the material and this charge is measured?

Any help would be appreciated! Thanks
 
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Just to cover basics, you should look up 'Image sensor', 'Charge-coupled device', and 'Active pixel sensor' at Wikipedia.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image_sensor
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charge-coupled_device
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Active_pixel_sensor

The most common way of 'splitting' up colour is actually to only have separate red, green, and blue sensors placed in very close proximity (with enough spectral 'overlap' so as to be able to detect in-between values such as yellow). Incidentally, this is how the red, green, and blue photoreceptors in our own eyes work.

As to the how of the sensors, CCD are different from CMOS sensors. CCDs have photosensitive regions operating basically on the principle you describe, with the excited charge accumulating in these sensor regions (acting as capacitors, which can then be read). CMOS sensors are based on photodiodes or phototransistors, conducting only when there's enough incident light, with more photons causing more conduction.
 
The RG and B signals that come from the colour processing in the camera are not the values that the sensor produces. RG&B signals (a 'vector' with three coordinates) are obtained by multiplying the three sensor outputs (another vector) by a (3X3) matrix. This is a fact that nearly everyone ignores. RGB values are what is supplied to the Display. Proper colour reproduction would not work if it weren't done this way. This is one reason that colour film gives such poor (inaccurate but, sometimes, nice to look at) colour quality. It's along the same lines as Vinyl and Tape analogue recording - poor but pleasant.
 
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