boBQuincy
<font color=green>I am not carrying three pods<br>
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2002
- Messages
- 5,083
I previously wrote about an issue where some of the latest cameras have sensors that are "better" than almost any lens available. This is repeatedly being proven in the lab and in the field.
From a recent article on Canon's 50D in "Luminous Landscape"... "There's little question, however, that this camera marks new territory in the realm of imaging with a 35mm SLR style digital camera. The diffraction-limited resolution aperture for this sensor is around f/7! (The appropriate formula is: diffraction limited aperture equals 1600 divided by the pixel pitch in pixels per millimeter.) Using smaller apertures - say f/11 - will result in images with significant softness."
In other words, any aperture smaller than f/7 will result in increased softness due to diffraction limiting, *but* few lenses are at their best until about f/8. So, there are probably no lenses that will deliver the full potential of this camera, never mind lenses we mortals can actually afford and will carry.
Now of course this is not a total disaster and all sharpness will not be gone at f/11, diffraction is a gradual thing and at f/11 the loss may not be noticed except by pixel-peepers. Still, this does mean that we are not getting sharper images by going to the latest cameras, that "new" does not necessarily mean an upgrade.
For now we have reached (and exceeded) the pixel limit, maybe now the manufacturers will finally concentrate on something else that actually delivers better images! Don't hold your breath...
From a recent article on Canon's 50D in "Luminous Landscape"... "There's little question, however, that this camera marks new territory in the realm of imaging with a 35mm SLR style digital camera. The diffraction-limited resolution aperture for this sensor is around f/7! (The appropriate formula is: diffraction limited aperture equals 1600 divided by the pixel pitch in pixels per millimeter.) Using smaller apertures - say f/11 - will result in images with significant softness."
In other words, any aperture smaller than f/7 will result in increased softness due to diffraction limiting, *but* few lenses are at their best until about f/8. So, there are probably no lenses that will deliver the full potential of this camera, never mind lenses we mortals can actually afford and will carry.
Now of course this is not a total disaster and all sharpness will not be gone at f/11, diffraction is a gradual thing and at f/11 the loss may not be noticed except by pixel-peepers. Still, this does mean that we are not getting sharper images by going to the latest cameras, that "new" does not necessarily mean an upgrade.
For now we have reached (and exceeded) the pixel limit, maybe now the manufacturers will finally concentrate on something else that actually delivers better images! Don't hold your breath...
