I don't think that that is a helpful way of looking at the problem.
Invariant or not invariant at a particular ISO setting is - to some extent - a matter of judgement. Like if I showed you a yellowy-green Pantone color card, and asked you whether you you would call it yellow, or green, if forced to make a choice.
The question is: At a particular ISO setting, does (amplified) read noise dominate conversion noise?
A similar question is: At a particular ISO setting, is output noise significantly different from (amplified) read noise?
Those are both slightly fuzzy questions.
If you're OK-ish with a noise model where amplified read noise adds in quadrature to conversion noise, then in black areas of the image we have:
(Recorded noise, in DN) = sqrt( (conversion noise, in DN)^2 + ( gain * (output referred read noise, in DN) )^2 )
Where "DN" means "Digital Numbers" - the numbers stored in a (lossless) RAW file.
Examples:
- If conversion noise is 1DN, and gain * output referred read noise is 1DN, recorded noise is sqrt(2)=1.414DN
- If conversion noise is 1DN, and gain * output referred read noise is 2DN, recorded noise is sqrt(5)=2.236DN
- If conversion noise is 1DN, and gain * output referred read noise is 3DN, recorded noise is sqrt(10)=3.162DN
...
As the gain increases, conversion noise has less and less effect, and the recorded noise becomes - arbitrarily - close to gain*(output referred read noise), regardless of what the conversion noise was at base ISO.
To me, a camera is "ISOless" at a particular ISO if the recorded noise is - for practical purposes - equal to gain*(output referred read noise).
I just pulled up a noise-model spreadsheet I have, that says "ISOless" ("invariant") or "not ISOless" for a camera noise model, at different ISOs.
It seems that it says "ISOless" if gain*(output referred read noise) is more than 90% of the recorded noise (in black areas of the image, remember).
I could have chosen some other number, like 80% or 75%. But 10% or 30% would be silly.
...
The Aptina dual-gain thing has the effect of reducing read noise at (or above) the gain setting at which it turns on. Perhaps enough to make conversion noise significant again, so that the camera goes from being "ISOless" to "not ISOless" until the gain has increased sufficiently further.
We could have a camera that behaves like this:
- ISO 100: not ISOless
- ISO 200: ISOless
- ISO 400: ISOless
- ISO 800: not ISOless (Aptina thing kicks in).
- ISO 1600: ISOless
- ISO 3200: ISOless
- ISO 6400: ISOless
That would mean that ISO 400, ISO 3200, and ISO6400 could be a bit pointless when capturing RAW images.
But the main thing is usually to try to capture as many photons as you can.
...
All uses of "ISO" above belong in scare quotes.