Merge LRGB Images
The Merge LRGB Images command combines 4
separate images that contain red, green, blue channels and a
luminance channel. The result is an RGB color image that can have,
in comparison to a normally merged RGB image, high signal to noise
ratio, sharpened details, and less color channel noise. These
improvements result form the addition of the luminance channel
image. Each input image is a luminance image rather than an RGB
image.
Overview
This command uses 4 input images to produce 1
output image, which is the merged RGB image. The luminance channel
is spread over the R, G, and B channels so that 4 images end up
producing a 3 channel RGB image. Using the Image selection boxes in
the dialog, the 4 input images may be selected from the same
Image Set in one window or they may be selected from
different windows. Each input image must not be an RGB image
itself.
In an LRGB image, the R, G, and B channels
contribute the color information while the Luminance image (usually
an unfiltered, high signal to noise ratio image) contributes
signal. The nature of human color perception makes it so the
luminance channel image can be sharpened to show sharper detail in
the output image without incurring the grainy effect of sharpening
the color channel images. Conversely, the color channel images are
of lower signal to noise ratio and they may be
de-speckled to remove color channel noise without
making the merged image appear more blurry. The Luminance image is
usually merged in at a percentage level so that it does not
overwhelm the color channel data. Often a Luminance % setting in the range of 15 to 40% is
appropriate.
When doing trial merging to approach the ideal
result, you are usually spending effort getting the brightness and
color balance correct. These attributes are not affected by the
sharpening and de-speckling operations but these 2 operations do
occupy most if the processing time spent in the merging process. To
disable them during the trial phase, without actually unchecking
the options, check the Quick option.
The name "Quick" tells you that the merging is ignoring the
Sharpen and De-speckle Properties to obtain a quick result.
When you are ready for the final merging, uncheck Quick to use the
Sharpen and De-speckle options a you have them set.
The Auto check box
enables automatic merging after a parameter change so that you
don't have to keep clicking the Merge button. If you want Mira to
automatically update the merged image after you change a parameter,
Check this item. if the Auto box is
not checked, Mira does an update only when you click
the [Merge] button.
Oftentimes you will choose new setting that give a
poorer result. The [Revert] button
recalls the set of values used in the most recent, prior merging
and updates the Properties with them. This is an "undo" for the
Properties but not for the merged image.
The critical determinant of the brightness,
contrast, and color balance is the choice of the Min Value and Max
Value levels in the 4 input images. As described below, Mira
gives you 3 ways to set these values.
Procedure for Merging LRGB Images
-
Select the L, R, G, and B images using the 4
image selection controls.
-
Specify the Min
Value and Max Value settings.
[more] The Min and Max
values can be acquired using the dropper or they can be entered
directly.
-
Set the Quick
option: [more] Checking this option
disables the CPU-intensive Sharpen and De-speckle
calculations.
-
-
For a trial result (not the final result)
check the Quick box.
-
When the brightness, contrast, and color
balance are acceptable, un-check Quick to allow the Sharpen and De-speckle options to take effect.
-
Click [Merge] to
combine the channel images. [more] The merged image appears in a new
window that remains attached to the Merge LRGB command. You do not
need to close this new Image Window between merging cycles, as Mira
overwrites the output image each time you merge.
-
Examine the merged image. if it is very close to
the final result, you are done. [more] You can fine-tune
the color, contrast, and brightness using simpler palette methods
rather than by using this command.
-
If the brightness, contrast, or color balance
are not what you want, go to step 2.
Using Min Value and Max Value
The Min Value and Max Value Properties control the
placement of the "black point" and the "white point" in the
intensity values of the input images. When merged into the output
RGB image, all pixel values lower than the Min Value are assigned "black" and all pixels
above Max Value are assigned "white".
These values do not need to be the same for each of the images.
Typically they may be different if the images have different
background signal or inherently different contrast. The particular
values you use affect the overall brightness of the RGB image as
well as its contrast and color balance.
Beyond wild guessing, there are 3 ways to choose
the Min Value and Max Value Properties:
-
Use Values from a Prior Session. Mira
saves the values from a session and loads them the next time you
open the dialog. If you use a standardized procedure for producing
LRGB Images, this gives you known starting points so you can
reproduce the same result each time.
-
Use Samples from the Images. In this
method, you choose pixel values from the R, G, B, and L images to
specify actual values for Min Value
and Max Value. This methods works
only if the R, G, B, and L images are in an
Image Set in the same window, because it uses the
Image Cursor to load a sample of each image at the
same location. To do this, you must select the Min Value before the
Max Value. Simply move the image cursor onto a region you want to
be absolute black in the merged image and click Load in the Min
Value column. Then move the image cursor onto a region of
the images that should be the lowest white value (i.e., the
saturation point above which everything is pure white) and click
Load in the Max Value column. You can adjust these values
afterward to change the color balance, brightness or darkness, or
the contrast.
Note that this is an interactive procedure and you
can tune the Properties after each trial to home in on the best
possible result. Simply adjust the Properties and re-Merge the
images to get a new result.
Using the Lock Option
When you adjust the Min
Value or Max Value,
there are times when you want to set the values independently, and
there are other times when you want them to change together. To
make the entire column of values change when you change one of
them, check the Lock check box in the
appropriate column.
After merging, you can refine the color using
simpler methods than Min Value and
Max Value. You can finalize the
brightness, contrast, and color balance using the palette
stretching using the
Palette Pane or
Palette Properties dialog.
Related Topics
Working with RGB Images
Merge RGB Images
Mira Pro x64 User's Guide, Copyright Ⓒ 2023 Mirametrics, Inc. All
Rights Reserved.
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