shawn
Veteran
The digital sensor isn't changed when the ISO is changed.
Rather, ISO is kind of like the volume control on your electronic device. You can turn the volume up or down. It doesn't change the source, like music played from a CD, iTunes, whatever....
ISO is the volume control for digital photography. Instead of changing volume it's changing ISO. The higher the ISO the more the gain is cranked up. As you crank up, things like digital noise start rearing its head. Sometimes more noise is good, sometimes it's yuck.
Kind of... but it is more like the volume control feeding a recording device. If you feed to low of a signal to an A/D (analog to digital converter) the noise of the A/D itself also becomes an issue as it is close to the level of the signal itself. You want to feed the A/D more signal to get the A/Ds own noise further away from the signal... more SNR/DR.
Of course as you add gain you are also amplifying the noise within the signal itself. And if you amplify to much you can overload/clip the A/D.
Shawn