Sensor Size and Angle of View

Posted on by learndigitalphotography in Blog, Digital Camera Tips, Digital Photography, Digital Photography Basics, Digital Photography Tips

camera_lensCameras with a digital sensor smaller than the typical 35mm film size will have a reduced field or angle of view when combined with a lens of the same focal length. This is basically due to the angle of view being a function of both focal length and the sensor or film size utilized. If a sensor smaller than the full-frame 35mm film format is used, such as the use of APS-C-sized digital sensors in DSLRs, then the field of view is cropped by the sensor to smaller than the 35mm full-frame format’s field of view.

This narrowing of the field of view is often described in terms of a focal length multiplier or crop factor, a factor by which a longer focal length lens would be needed to get the same field of view on a full-frame camera. If the digital sensor has approximately the same resolution (effective pixels per unit area) as the 35mm film surface (24 x 36 mm), then the result is similar to taking the image from the film camera and cutting it down (cropping) to the size of the sensor. For an APS-C size sensor, this would be a decrease to roughly the center 50% of the image. The less expensive, non-SLR models of digital cameras typically use much smaller sensor sizes and the reduction would be greater.

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Tags: Angle Of View, Aps, C Size, Digital Cameras, Digital Sensor, Digital Sensors, Effective Pixels, Film Camera, Film Format, Film Size, Film Surface, Focal Length Lens, Frame Camera, Frame Format, Image, Multiplier, Sensor Size, Slr Cameras, Slr Models, View Cameras

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