Home | Site Map
     

Digital Zoom Versus Optical Zoom


The digital camera is but a technological advancement of the conventional analog camera. And thus every component of the analog camera must have been upgraded or changed to bring in some improvisations. This discussion is an effort to unravel alteration and make one comparison between what was and what is! This discussion is thereby focused upon a very critical component of a camera (analog as well as digital), the zoom!

Before making a comparison it is important to discuss the significance of the subject matter, in this case the zoom. Well a zoom lens has more than a few portable glass components inside it. By adjusting these components, the focal length of the lens can be altered. Modifying the focal length alters the view distance as well as reduces the field of view, thereby making the projected image to appear larger.

It must me noted that both the optical zoom and the digital zoom are components that are used to magnify an image, but they work in fundamentally different principles and acquiesces drastically different results. In general, optical zooms always produce a far finer and advanced image than digital zoom.

Looking at the functions of these zooms, in digital cameras that offer optical zooms function the same way similar to a zoom lens of a conventional analog camera. A conventional lens works by accumulating light rays that are projected over a portion of a film, and in this case of a digital camera optical sensor. The distance of the lens from the focus point where all of the light rays converge is known as the focal length of the lens. Unlike the optical zoom, the digital zoom works by ranging the pixels in the ultimate image after the image has been captured. The fact remains that the same number of pixels are collected when the photograph is magnified. The only thing that alters is the light rays that are projected over the optical sensors to figure out those pixels.

It is a common intuition that optical lenses are far better than the digital zooms. The reason is that the digital camera zooms are more prone towards computer applications in them rather than mostly human interactions and expertise. Yet, it also remains a fact that beginner photographers find it more useful to handle a digital zoom and also its computer friendly nature. There the computer does the intricate tasks of finding some levelheaded approximation of colors that pixel might take up as it had captured the images or photographs. Many algorithms are existent in this area, but perhaps the most abundantly used algorithm involves looking at the pixels that are quite nearly like neighbors and come up with a kind of an average. Anyways the process remains too complicated and its end result is what the digital zoom users are interested in.

Thus the ultimate truth remains that it is useless to compare digital zooms with optical zooms. Perhaps it is more logical to compare optical zoom with optical zoom and digital zoom with digital zoom. Both these two types of zooms, the optical as well as the digital, have some good and bad qualities. Both of them have some extra features and preferences over the other. And thus it is not wise to compare them, even though a comparison may exist. The efforts would then perhaps look like comparing oranges with apples!

About The Author

Jakob Jelling is the founder of http://www.snapjunky.com. Visit his digital camera guide and learn how to take better pictures with your digicam.


MORE RESOURCES:

Yahoo! News Search Results for photography
Yahoo! News Search Results for photography

Photography club posts meetings (MyCentralJersey.com)
Bound Brook Memorial Library, 402 E. High St., Bound Brook, will host the Somerset County Photography Club on Tuesday, Jan. 13. This meeting will be devoted to a competition, including slides and digital images as well as prints. Visitors are invited, but only members may enter the competition.
PHOTOGRAPHY: The best of Island Packet staff photographer Jay Karr (Island Pa...
I?ve been taking pictures for the Island Packet for the last 18 years. I grew up in Fulton, Missouri, getting into photography in his high school?s publications class. I remember at the time feeling the pressure of having to come up with an occupation to prepare for in college and the relief I felt when I realized you can have a career as a photographer. Though my bachelor?s degree is in ...
PHOTOGRAPHY: The best of Island Packet staff photographer Sarah Welliver (Isl...
Before joining The Island Packet in October, Welliver spent time as a photography intern at the Sioux Falls (S.D.) Argus Leader, the Detroit Free Press and The Santa Fe New Mexican. Her photographs have been featured in publications including the Marine Corps Times, Wall Street Journal Online and PDNedu magazine. She graduated from the University of Montana in 2007.
A Literacy of Images: Nancy Newhall and the Art of Photography (The Jewish Jo...
Best known for writing text to accompany the photographs of Ansel Adams and Edward Weston, Nancy Newhall was also a widely published writer on photography, conservation, and American culture.
The Sony World Photography Awards and Photographer Delly Carr Put Football Ga...
Have you got what it takes to be the next Heinz Kluetmeier? The Sony World Photography Awards -- the global competition which honours photographers -- is looking for budding amateur photography to be submitted to the 2009 Sony Campaign Award.

 
 

 Home | Site Map | Foto Log | Perfect Laptop | Webdesign Place

Copyright © 2008 Photo-Log.info