I gave some more thought to the topic under discussion, and I'm now pretty sure of what is the Ilford sensitivity and what can/cannot be done with the available graph.
Executive summary.
- The plot is derived from a wedge spectrogram (it's written in the datasheet, sono big news)
- The vertical scale is sensitivity on a log scale
- But the vertical axis has been rescaled to 0-1
- So the amplitude of the log scale is lost
- To apply a correction we need the actual sensitivity on a linear scale (give or take a global factor)
- But we cannot invert the log
- So we are stuck with a qualitative plot
More details
As I stated in my previous post, to obtain a wedge spectrogram, the gradient of attenuation of the wedge must ab at right angle to the direction of spectral dispersion. Contrary to what the diagram in the Ilford diagram might suggest; see post 37 by
@snusmumriken.
At each wavelength, starting from the "clear" side of the wedge, the film is strongly illuminated; going along the wedge gradient, the light intensity decreases, and so does the exposure of the film, up to a point where a set density of the developed film (say B+F+1.0) is reached. The farther one can go (decreasing illumination) into the wedge gradient to reach that condition, the higher the sensitivity. Once developed, the wedge spectrogram looks like this, borrowing from a post by Ron Mowrey in a past thread with similar concerns as the present one
https://www.photrio.com/forum/threads/equal-energy-vs-wedge-spectrogram.64615/
Next is a little sketch I made to illustrate the various relevant quantities. Those familiar with these notions need not feel offended by the level of explanation; I'm just trying to keep everybody on board.
Assume a wedge with total thickness 6mm, where the absorbing "gray" glass is such that 2mm transmits 1/10 of incident light. Then 2x2mm transmits 1/100, and 3x2mm transmits 1/1000. Density is minus log of transmission, so ranges (in this
example) from 0 to 3. and sensitivity is the reciprocal (give or take a scale factor) of the amount of light needed to achieve a pre-set darkening of the film (avoid "density" just to avoid confusion with the
wedge density).
Just to make things simpler, one might assume that the film is a graphic arts film. Then the dotted curve is just the boundary between the opaque and clear regions in the negative after development.
So the "y" coordinate of the curve is proportional to the logarithm of the sensitivity. But to apply a correction for the spectral distribution of the light source, one first needs the natural value of the sensitivity.
Say we have u=log10(s). We can undo the log with s=10^(u). But if the scale for u is unknown, or we use a wrong scaling for u, weird things result; e.g. s'=10^(2*u)=s^2. Clearly a non-linear operation. Applying the spectral energy correction to the log of the sensitivity (the published curve) is also incorrect. And taking the log (a second time!) does not improve the situation.
If I can be allowed to fantasize, imagine the following scenario. Ilford engineer records the wedge spectrogram; looks like the one from Ron Mowrey; not pretty enough for the published datasheet. So he/she tasks a summer intern with the rest of the work. Develop film. Enlarge on grade 5 paper. Trace the black/white boundary, and transfer to graph paper. Prettify the curve using a French curve. And, because the intern is fresh from University and has been taught how a proper graph should look, he/she makes up a vertical scale 0-1 normalized to max value.