Why should I care about my digital camera
CCD sensor size?
By: Ziv Haparnas
Everybody
knows to check how many mega pixels their new camera
has. Although more mega pixels does not necessarily
mean better photos most people understand why mega
pixels are important. One characteristic of digital
cameras that many ignore is the sensor size.
Digital cameras capture digital photos. A digital
photo is a collection of pixels. Each pixel has its
color and intensity. When all these pixels are put
together the result is an illusion of a photo.
Pixels are captured by the camera using an
electronic sensor known as a CCD. The CCD sensor is
a silicon chip that is built of many tiny light
sensors. When taking a photo each such tiny sensor
measures the amount of light also known as intensity
and some other attributes such as the color. Each
such sensor results in one pixel and all the tiny
sensors put together represent one digital photon.
This is very interesting to know - but why should
you care? The reason is that there is a relationship
between the size of that CCD sensor and the number
of mega pixels that it supports. This relationship
is important and has practical consequences. It is
intuitive that for the same CCD sensor size, the
more mega pixels the smaller each CCD tiny sensor
is. The same is true if the number of mega pixels is
fixed: the bigger the CCD sensor the bigger each
tiny sensor is. For each CCD sensor size and number
of mega pixel we can calculate the pixel sensor
size.
The pixel sensor size is important and influences
the characteristic of the digital camera especially
in marginal light scenarios. Your digital camera
sensitivity to light is directly influenced by the
pixel sensor size. The bigger the sensor size the
more light it can accumulate in a certain period of
time. The result is that bigger pixel sensor sizes
allow for faster shutter speeds at lower light
conditions. In addition bigger pixel sensor sizes
result in less noise captured by each such sensor.
In
practical terms if you take two digital cameras with
the same number of mega pixels but different CCD
sensor sizes - the camera with the larger CCD sensor
size will be provide digital photos that are sharper
and have less noise. It will also be able to take
digital photos in scenes that are too dark for the
other camera. In normal light scenes the higher
light sensitivity allows more range for changing the
aperture and shutter speed and more freedom with
getting different focus depths.
Bigger CCD sensors are more expensive. There are
many reasons for that one of them is the lower
manufacturing yield. For that reason cheaper pocket
cameras use smaller sensors than high end digital
SLR cameras. CCD sensor size also influences other
optical attributes of the camera - for example the
aperture needed in a specific scene changes as the
CCD size changes. The depth of field is directly
influenced by such aperture changes. To normalize
optical figures many cameras manufacturers choose to
normalize their optical attributes to the good old
35mm film (film can be seen as a sensor too, 35mm in
size).
About the Author
You can find more information on digital photo
printing and photography in general on
printrates.com - a site dedicated to
photo prints This article can be published and
used as long as the resource box including the
backlink is included. Mr. Haparnas writes about
science and technology.