How Does a Digital Camera Active Auto
Focus Work
By: Ziv Haparnas
In
focus objects in a digital photo is a very basic
requirement for high quality photography. There are
two different ways to focus on such objects:
manual or automatic. There are a few automatic focus
methods one of them is known as active auto focus.
High quality sharp and crisp digital photos are a
result of many optical parameters that need to be
set right. One of the most important optical
parameters is focus. When objects in a digital photo
are out of focus they look blurry and are missing
details and clarity. When objects are in focus they
look sharp and crisp.
While focus can be set manually by the photographer
in most cases using the digital camera’s automatic
focus feature is much easier and faster. There are
many different algorithms and methods that digital
cameras use in order to automatically determine the
right focus for a specific scenario. One of those
methods is knows as active auto focus.
Active auto focus
Setting the digital camera focus to its right
position can be easy if only you knew the exact
distance between the camera and the object or
objects that you are trying to focus on. If you know
the lenses that you are using, the aperture and all
the other optical settings then by simply by knowing
the distance to the object or objects in the digital
photo the exact focus can be calculated and set.
This is exactly how active focus works. Digital
cameras that are equipped with an active auto focus
system use distance sensors that measure the
distance from the camera to the objects in the
scene. Usually the camera measures the distance to
the object or objects around the center of the
photo.
There are a few techniques to measure the distance.
One of them is by using an ultrasonic sensor. Such a
sensor transmits an ultrasonic signal toward the
object. When the signal hits the object it bounces
back and some of its bounced energy is received back
by the digital camera sensors. The digital camera
measures the time it took the signal to reach back
the camera and since the speed of such an ultrasonic
signal is known the distance can be calculated.
Other methods use infrared signals. Once the camera
determined the distance to the objects the focus can
be set by calculating the exact position of the
lenses and by moving the lenses to that position.
Active auto focus has the advantage of working in
complete darkness. Since the camera does not rely on
measurements done on the captured photo the camera
sensors can calculate the distance to the object in
complete darkness and in focus high quality digital
photos can be taken in scenarios where otherwise
focus would have been impossible.
Since the active auto focus method requires extra
sensors it is more expensive to implement and is
usually found in higher end digital SLR cameras.
Active auto focus can sometimes fail. The reasons
can vary: some objects tend to absorb the
transmitted signal energy instead of bouncing it
back while other objects actually radiate similar
signals (for example candles radiate infrared
energy) and can confuse the digital camera sensors.
When the auto focus fails you can either try to
focus on other objects in the same distance from the
digital camera, lock the focus and pan back to the
original objects you wanted to capture or you can
revert to old fashion manual focus.
Ziv Haparnas is a technology veteran and writes
about practical technology and science issues. This
article can be reprinted and used as long as the
resource box including the backlink is included. You
can find more information about photo album printing
and photography in general on
http://www.printrates.com - a site dedicated to
photo printing.