{ "version": "https://jsonfeed.org/version/1", "title": "eay.cc", "description": "Weblog von Stefan Grund", "home_page_url": "https://eay.cc", "feed_url": "https://eay.cc/2022/rembrandts-nachtwache-als-ultra-high-resolution-foto/feed/json", "icon": "https://eay.cc/apple-touch-icon.png", "favicon": "https://eay.cc/favicon.ico", "author": { "name": "Stefan Grund", "url": "https://stefangrund.de/", "avatar": "https://stefangrund.de/avatar.jpg" }, "items": [ { "id": "37763", "_type": "link", "url": "https://eay.cc/2022/rembrandts-nachtwache-als-ultra-high-resolution-foto/", "title": "Rembrandts \u00bbNachtwache\u00ab als Ultra-High-Resolution-Foto", "content_html": "
\n\n", "date_published": "2022-01-05T14:31:06+00:00", "date_modified": "2022-01-05T14:31:22+00:00", "author": { "name": "Stefan" }, "tags": [ "fotografie", "kunst" ], "_short_url": "https://eay.li/3gm", "external_url": "https://www.rijksmuseum.nl/en/stories/operation-night-watch/story/ultra-high-resolution-photo" } ] }This is the largest and most detailed photo ever taken of a work of art. It is 717 gigapixels, or 717,000,000,000 pixels, in size.
\nThe distance between two pixels is 5 micrometres (0.005 millimetre), which means that one pixel is smaller than a human red blood cell.
\nThe team used a 100-megapixel Hasselblad H6D 400 MS-camera to make 8439 individual photos measuring 5.5cm x 4.1cm. Artificial intelligence was used to stitch these smaller photographs together to form the final large image, with a total file size of 5.6 terabytes.