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DxOMark Mobile report: Samsung Galaxy S7 edge

14

DxOMark Mobile Report: Samsung Galaxy S7 edge

Summary

The Samsung Galaxy S7 edge is the successor to last year's Galaxy S6 edge and shares its camera specification with the slightly smaller Galaxy S7. In the camera department pixel count has been reduced from 16 to 12MP compared to the S6 edge. This results in larger 1.4um pixels or a 56 percent increase in pixel size in relation to the predecessor. Samsung has also introduced a Dual-Pixel AF-system which splits every single pixel on the sensor into two photodiodes for on-chip phase detection. Light is captured through an F1.7 aperture and an optical image stabilization system keeps things steady at slow shutter speeds and when shooting video.

In the DxOMark test the new camera specification performs very well and with a DxOMark Mobile score of 88 the Samsung Galaxy S7 edge is the new leader in the DxOMark smartphone rankings, relegating the Galaxy S6 edge plus and the Sony Xperia Z5 to a joint number 2 spot. In still image mode the testers liked "Good detail preservation in low light and fine detail in outdoor conditions, good exposure and dynamic range in all light conditions, low noise levels" and a "fast and accurate autofocus". When shooting with flash the DxOMark team found the images to show "very good detail preservation and accurate white balance and color preservation". On the downside, "under tungsten light, a yellow cast is visible, in very high-contrast scenes some image areas are clipped and ringing is visible".

When shooting video the test engineers were impressed by the "very good autofocus behavior, with good tracking capabilities and, fast and smooth convergence in all conditions". They also noted the "very good stabilization, good detail preservation in bright light, good overall exposure and color rendering and low noise levels, even in low light". Negative points included a "jitter artifact and loss of detail in low light". Slight color casts were also noticeable, particularly in low light.

Still Photography

Color, Exposure and Contrast

The DxOMark team found the Galaxy S7 edge images to show "good exposure and dynamic range and vivid and pleasant color in all conditions". White balance is accurate at all times as well. On the downside, "a yellow cast is visible under tungsten illuminants and color shading is slightly visible". In high-contrast scenes some highlight-clipping can occur. Overall the testers found the colors to be more saturated than on previous Samsung devices. 

Overall DxOMark awarded the Samsung Galaxy S7 edge scores of:

  • 4.6 out of 5 for Exposure
  • 4.5 out of 5 for White Balance accuracy
  • 4.3 out of 5 for Color shading in low light*
  • 4.5 out of 5 for Color shading in bright light*
  • 3.0 out of 5 for Color Rendering in low light
  • 4.5 out of 5 for Color Rendering in bright light

*Color Shading is the nasty habit cellphone cameras have of rendering different areas of the frame with different color shifts, resulting in pictures with, for example, pinkish centers and greenish corners.

Noise and Details

DxOMark's engineers reported that the Samsung Galaxy S7 edge images show "good detail preservation in low light, low noise levels in all conditions" and good fine detail preservation in bright light. However, "very fine detail is lost in all conditions".

Texture Acutance

Texture acutance is a way of measuring the ability of a camera to capture images that preserve fine details, particularly the kind of low contrast detail (such as fine foliage, hair or fur) that can be blurred away by noise reduction or obliterated by excessive sharpening.

Sharpness is an important part of the quality of an image, but while it's easy to look at an image and decide visually whether it's sharp or not, the objective measurement of sharpness is less straightforward.

An image can be defined as 'sharp' if edges are sharp and if fine details are visible. In-camera processing means that it's possible to have one of these (sharp edges) but not the other (fine details). Conventional MTF measurements tell us how sharp an edge is, but have drawbacks when it comes to measuring fine detail preservation. Image processing algorithms can detect edges and enhance their sharpness, but they can also find homogeneous areas and smooth them out to reduce noise.

Texture acutance, on the other hand, can qualify sharpness in terms of preservation of fine details, without being fooled by edge enhancement algorithms.

A dead leaf pattern is designed to measure texture acutance. It's obtained by drawing random shapes that occlude each other in the plane, like dead leaves falling from a tree. The statistics of this model follow the distribution statistics in natural images.

In this example from a DSLR without edge enhancement, sharpness seems equal on edge and on texture. Many details are visible in the texture.

In this second example, edges have been digitally enhanced, and the edge looks over sharp, with visible processing halos ('ringing'). On the texture part, many details have disappeared.

At first sight, the images from these two cameras may appear equally sharp. A sharpness measurement on edges will indeed confirm this impression, and will even show that the second camera is sharper. But a closer examination of low contrasted textures shows that the first camera has better preservation of fine details than the second. The purpose of the texture acutance measurement is to qualify this difference.

Note: Acutance is a single value metric calculated from a MTF result. Acutance is used to assess the sharpness of an image as viewed by the human visual system, and is dependent on the viewing conditions (size of image, size of screen or print, viewing distance). Only the values of texture acutance are given here. The measurements are expressed as a percentage of the theoretical maximum for the chosen viewing condition. The higher the score, the more details can be seen in an image. 
 
For all DxOMark Mobile data presented on connect.dpreview.com we're only showing 8MP equivalent values, which gives us a level playing field for comparison between smartphone cameras with different megapixel values by normalizing all to 8MP (suitable for fairly large prints). DxOMark also offers this data for lower resolution use-cases (web and onscreen). For more information on DxOMark's testing methodology and acutance measurements please visit the website at www.dxomark.com.
Texture acutance is a touch better in daylight conditions.
The S7 edge's texture acutance is leading the competition by a whisker.

Edge Acutance

Edge acutance is a measure of edge sharpness in images captured by the phone's camera. Again we're only looking at the most demanding of the three viewing conditions that DxOMark reports on - the 8MP equivalent.
The S7 is leading the pack in terms of edge acutance as well.
Edge acutance is consistent across light levels.

Visual Noise

Visual noise is a value designed to assess the noise in an image as perceived by the human visual system, depending on the viewing condition (size of image, size of screen or print, viewing distance). The measurements have no units and can be simply viewed as the weighted average of noise standard deviation for each channel in the CIE L*a*b* color space. The lower the measurement, the less noise in the image.

Noise levels are low at all light levels.
The S7 edge produces noticeably lower noise levels than the competition.

Noise and Detail Perceptual scoring

DxOMark engineers don't just point camera phones at charts, they also take and analyze plenty of real-world shots and score them accordingly. Their findings for the Samsung Galaxy S7 edge are:

Natural scene

  • Texture (bright light): 4.7 out of 5
  • Texture (low light): 3.9 out of 5
  • Noise (bright light): 4.2 out of 5
  • Noise (low light) 4.2 out of 5
Bright light sample shot
100% crop: fine detail is preserved
100% crop: noise is finely grained
Low light (20 Lux) studio shot
100% crop: fine detail still visible
100% crop: very low noise

Artifacts

Phone cameras, like entry-level compact cameras, tend to suffer from artifacts such as sharpening halos, color fringing, vignetting (shading) and distortion, which can have an impact on the visual appeal of the end result. DxOMark engineers measure and analyze a range of artifacts. Their findings after testing the Samsung Galaxy S7 are shown below:

  • Slight aliasing and color artifact
  • Ringing visible

Perceptual Scores

  • Sharpness 4.2 out of 5
  • Color fringing 4.0 out of 5

Measured findings

  • Ringing center 14.0%
  • Ringing corner 10.5%
  • Max geometric distortion -0.4%
  • Luminance shading 19.9%

Distortion and Chromatic Aberrations

The graph shows the magnification from center to edge (with the center normalized to 1). The Samsung Galaxy S7 edge shows slight pincushion distortion, which you are not going to notice in normal photography.
Chromatic aberrations are very well under control. 

Autofocus

DxOMark also tests autofocus accuracy and reliability by measuring how much the acutance - or sharpness - varies with each shot over a series of 30 exposures (defocusing then using the autofocus for each one). As with other tests these results are dependent on the viewing conditions (a little bit out of focus matters a lot less with a small web image than a full 8MP shot viewed at 100%). Using the 8MP equivalent setting, the Samsung Galaxy S7 edge performs very well in all light conditions. The overall score is 98/100 in bright light and 90/100 in low light.

Pros: 

  • Fast and accurate autofocus
Cons: 
  • Some instabilties are noticeable
Autofocus repeatability - average acutance difference with best focus: low light 6.33%, bright light 2.23%

Flash

The Samsung Galaxy S7 edge offers a dual-LED flash for illumination in very low light. DxOMark scored the camera 86/100 overall for its flash performance. 

Pros: 

  • Very good detail preservation, accurate white balance and color preservation

Cons:

  • Slight exposure irregularities

Overall DxOMark Mobile Score for Photo: 88 / 100


Video Capture

DxOMark engineers put phone cameras through a similarly grueling set of video tests, and you can read their full findings on the DxOMark website here. Overall, DxOMark found the Samsung Galaxy S7 edge's video mode to perform very well, with a reliable autofocus, efficient stabilization and good detail. On the downside, some jittering and a loss of detail are noticeable in low light.    

Pros: 

  • Very good autofocus behavior: good tracking capabilities, fast and smooth convergence 
  • Very good stabilization in all light conditions
  • Good detail preservation in bright light
  • Good exposure and color rendering
  • Low noise levels, even in low light

Cons: 

  • Jitter artifact visible in low light conditions 
  • Loss of details noticeable in low light
  • Color shading is slightly noticeable in all conditions but particularly in low light

Overall DxOMark Mobile Score for Video: 88 / 100

DXOMark Mobile Score
88
DXOMark Image Quality Assessment

With a DxOMark Mobile score of 88 the Samsung Galaxy S7 edge takes the number one spot in the DxOMark smartphone rankings. The camera captures very good detail in all light conditions, with low noise levels across the board. Dynamic range and flash performance are very good as well and the new Dual Pixel AF system is working swiftly and reliably.

In video mode the testers were impressed by good tracking and overall AF performance as well as the efficient stabilization. Detail is good in brighter light and the only minor negatives are an occasional jitter artifact and color cast in lower light. Overall the Samsung performs impressively well and is well deserving of the top spot. For a more detailed analysis, visit www.dxomark.com.

Photo Mobile Score 88   Video Mobile Score 88
Exposure and Contrast 90   Exposure and Contrast 89
Color 83   Color 86
Autofocus 94   Autofocus 92
Texture 91   Texture 84
Noise 89   Noise 94
Photo Artifacts 79   Video Artifacts 85
Flash 86   Stabilization 90

Comments

Total comments: 14

Waiting for InVisage with a global shutter :)

2 upvotes

I have the S7 Edge and must say that it is the smartphone camera to date. It does have a major bug though (just like the s6 had). Colors in low light just become way to yellow, so much so that I have to manually set up the white balance for almost every low light shot.

0 upvotes
DanielFjall

Pointing the camera to a white surface like a wall for example, it will correct the white balance by itself after a while. I have noticed this on my S7.

2 upvotes

Well that doesn't really help if you don't have a white wall near you. Switching to Pro-mode and adjusting the WB there is faster anyway.

0 upvotes

Autofocus is 92!? It should be 100 for a phone camera! May be 99 if you wish to play safe.

Edited 29 seconds after posting
0 upvotes
DanielFjall

It's a 98 in bright light.

1 upvote

and next month iphone 7 will be 89, and then 90 and then 100....getting boring but who cares lets spend another 700

0 upvotes

The iPhone hasn't has a top sensor in a loooong time

1 upvote
Mister Roboto

Next month? Not a chance, next year? or maybe not anymore? Until they abandon the microscopic sensor of 1/3, iPhone will be in the oblivion for a while.

4 upvotes

@Mister Roboto
Time to collect your check from Samsung. I know I can always count on you to make an exaggerated comment against Apple and then upvote your own comment.

2 upvotes

Which Sensor version did you test? Samsung or Sony? Would you try to compare two versions? Thanks

1 upvote

They are basically the same sensor made at different plants. Sony makes the first production run where Samsung makes it after the rush stops.

0 upvotes

There were some reports 2 different results between 2 sensors. So hope dpreview can stated which sensor version was tested. And how's the another one?

2 upvotes

i have both the s7 Edge and the iPhone 6s+.

The latter outputs SIGNIFICANTLY less oversharpened OOC JPEG's. However, when shooting the s7 edge into DNG and developing later, the s7 produces much better results.

3 upvotes
Total comments: 14
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