Well, in general, the smallest probe describes the finest details, so on that principle,
the image with the highest resolution would be the one you get when you flood the
subject with gamma rays. Unfortunately, gamma rays are hard to generate, hard to
detect, they can wreck the sample under study, and they're dangerous, so there's not
a lot of gamma-ray Photography going on in laboratories across this great land of ours.
The highest practical frequency / shortest practical wavelengths for high-resolution imaging
are those of X-rays for microscopic imaging, and ... believe it or not ... ultrasound, for the
macroscopic kind.
GAMMA
Space based telescope
magnification is the number of times an object is enlarged, while resolution is the amount of data (detail) in an image.
go onto Google images and type in 'radiation diagram' look at second image with a cartoon sun in it- for that would be your answer
No, you cannot assume that highest illumination will always give you the best image. It depends on a great many things. Lighting is an art in itself.
Magnification is the amount by which the image you see will be larger than the actual object, ie. if the image you see appears to be twice as large as the original object then it will be a 2x magnification. (magnification = size of image / size of object) Resolution is the smallest possible visible thing on the enlarged image. On a satellite picture the resolution may be 1m2 meaning that anything smaller is not visible on that picture. In the case of an electron microscope, for example, anything smaller than 1 electron will not be visible using the electron microscope.
Convex lens gives an enlarged image when the object is placed between F and 2F, at F and between F and C.
with your image resolution? Nothing happens it remains the same till you change it in Image Size dialog. Image > Image Size.. Magnification is for your convenience to see enlarged image nothing really happens to actual resolution of original image.
Go to Image > Image Size. If you want to keep current Width and Height of the image uncheck Resample image then type new reolution in Resolution field. When you want to resample image (to change Width and Height to match new resolution) check Resample Image and type desired resolution in Resolution field.
Resolution of image is used to determine the quality of image in digital camera.
Right click the image, choose properties and go to the summary tab. You will find there the image width and height. Together they give the image resolution.
go to http://www.shrinkpictures.com/ its a online image resizer and you can set the size and image quality. hope this helps
Changing the image resolution will affect the file size of the image and the quality of the image. Image resolution is measure in DPI, which is Dots Per Inch, this means that if you increase the resolution then the DPI will increase and the quality of the image will get better as a result as there are more pixels that make up the image, so the image will be more distinct and sharper. When the image resolution is increased the image has more pixels, this is the exact opposite to the compression techniques, this means that the file will get a lot bigger as the number of pixels increases. Decreasing the resolution, however, will make the image quality lower but will reduce the file size.
Resolution is defined as the smallest number of discernible detail in an image. Spatial resolution is the smallest discernible detail in an image and gray level resolution refers to the smallest discernible change is gray level.
Image Size
Image > Image Size
After opening the image you want to check the resolution of by going to "File", then "Open", click "Image", and then from the dropdown box, select "Image Size". In the new box that opens up, the width, and height boxes will tell you what resolution the image is.
Resolution
The resolution.