This is new information for me. I didn't know about "ISO invariant." I wonder if any of my cameras have that feature? Nikon D300 and D700; Fuji x10, x20, X100; LeicaSonic D-Lux 6?
My Fuji X20 has a dynamic range selector that allows DR100%, 200%, or 400%. It allows DR400% at ISO 400 or higher; DR200% at ISO200 or higher; and DR100% at ISO 100 or higher. I wonder if that is related to ISO invariance?
Many current cameras can be operated as if they are ISO invariant. I am not familiar with the LeicaSonic D-Lux 6, but the others you list are not.
In my post,I mentioned a site that publishes DR vs ISO data from unrendered raw files for a large number of cameras. The screen capture below compares three
Nikon bodies. This data is from that
link.
The D7000 (blue plot) is strictly ISO-invariant. The only way post-acquiition brightness is achieved in-camera is by digital multiplication of the raw-file values. There is no amplification of the DC voltages in between the the sensor and the analog-to-digital converter.
With the D700 (green plot) the DR range is a function of ISO. It is ISO variant.
The D800 (red plot) is essentially ISO invariant even though it uses electronic amplification. This is because its CMOS sensor unit's ISO amplification technology has extremely low read noise at all ISO settings. This means the increase in read noise with amplification is below the minimum detection threshold of the ADC. Note below the D800 sensor's native ISO DR does not increase. This is because the data at native ISO is digitally scaled so the exposure matches the light meter's estimate.
For completeness the DR in these plots is directly proportional to the signal to noise ratio. So I am using the DR vs ISO characteristics. This assumption is confirmed by published (
link 1,
link 2) measurements of the Fujifilm X-E1 raw SNR vs ISO. In the second the data shows the read noise is essentially ISO invariant for at least 4 stops of under exposure. Post #23 in this thread indicates this is not the same for sensor thermal noise that comes into play during very long shutter times (2 mins.)
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The Fujifilm in-Camrea JPEG DR Rendering Parameter.
Like many other brands, Fujifilm provides a means for JPEG users to automatically invoke selective pulling of highlight regions and pushing of shadow regions. The marketing name for these methods is usually trademarked and Fujifilm choose the term DR for their process.
The menu parameter name, DR, that invokes JPEG push/pull rendering is an unfortunate, misleading choice.
Fujifilm decided when DR = 200 or 400, ISO has to be at least 400 or 800 - respectively. That is Fujifilm wants minimize the chance the sensor will blow highlights by forcing sensor underexposure (when one let's the meter decide exposure). According to the data, this actually decreases the analog DR when the shutter is open!. At DR = 100 nothing happens.
So what the Fujifilm DR setting actually does is produce a JPEG that is unlikely to have blown highlights while the push/pull in-camera JPEG rendering makes the most of the data's inherent dynamic range. This is convenient for JPEG users at the cost reducing maximum possible analog dynamic range by 2 or 4 stops! Raw file users should never use DR 200 or 400.