I think this is maybe more about naming things than logic or physics.
Or a ref. that tells us how exif's IntegrationTime 0x0423 is measured or calculated?
I have no idea. I also have no idea how (decimal) 1055 would relate to "1/66sec".
I thought the image I posted explained that "Integration Time" is equal to 'exposure time' plus 'readout duration' ...
I don't see how that follows.
It doesn't make much sense to add 'exposure time' to 'readout duration', unless referring to an electronic second curtain, where 'readout duration' is, in effect, the shutter travel time AKA rolling shutter.
You also wrote:
After using better search terms, I found it to [be?] the time between the first opening of the "slit" to the closure of the last slit in a rolling shutter.
This is what I thought you meant by "integration time".
Which is (shutter travel time) + (exposure time)
Which we can deduce from the X-sync speed of your camera and your chosen shutter speed ("1/6000") is something like 5ms, or 1/200 s.
Definitely not anything nearly as large as 1/66 s.
Meaning that, when set to high speed over the 'sync' speed, the rolling shutter effect would still be possible from a moving object.
Which is completely normal for electronic or mechanical focal plane shutters (linear or rotary).
My first guess is that this is how long each photosite was actively "on", taking charge; IOW, the underlying e-shutter "exposure" time which is partially (mostly, in this case) masked by the mechanical curtains.
That number is what you might use to predict dark current noise.
Remember, in any digital camera with mechanical shutter curtains, there photosites are active for far longer than they are exposed to light, with fast shutter speeds.
John Sheehy's idea can possibly give a time comparable with the "1/66sec" (15ms) that you refer to.
John Sheehy's sequence is:
- SD9 sensor is reset.
- SD9 sensor released from reset. (Start clock).
- Start first shutter curtain
- 1/6000 s later, start second shutter curtain.
- (SD9 shutter travel time ~= 4.8ms) later, second curtain has covered sensor.
- Start reading SD9 sensor
- Finish Reading SD9 sensor. (Stop clock).
Anyway, whatever it is that Sigma decided to call "Integration time", it's a weird thing specific to Sigma. "Integration time" would make more sense as a synonym for exposure time.
I think all this is an exercise in engineering archeology.
Some Sigma engineer wanted a a quantity that interested them in the EXIF, and slightly randomly called it "integration time".
Trying to find some established but uncommon meaning for this "integration time" phrase may not be fruitful.
It may have nothing to do with exposure at all. Some Pentax cameras have an "AF integration time" tag.
Putting: exif "integration time"
into a search engine, apart from a lot of astrophotography references where it means total exposure time, I found this:
exiftool.org/forum/index.php?topic=10134.0
In post #4 there's EXIF for a picture at "1/1000", where "Integration Time" is "1/1020".