Abstract

Abstract As shown in Fig. 3 in Chapter 1, the photographic process is composed of the capture of incident light by silver halide emulsion grains (sensing), formation of latent image centers on the silver halide grains (memory), and image formation by the catalytic action of the latent image centers for the reduction of silver halide grains to silver (display). It was first suggested by Sheppard, Trivelli, and Loveland1 in 1925 and is now accepted that a latent image center is an aggregate of silver atoms. Therefore, it is important that the mechanism of photographic sensitivity explain the concentration principle by which a silver aggregate is photolytically formed as a latent image center on a silver halide grain.

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