Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2010/11/27
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Its the potential to cause problems with the photographic image and esp. now with digital sensors which interests me. Not that many of my lenes will stop down below f16/ f22 and mostly I'll use f8 or wider, but with the creek shots etc I was using f22 to increase exposure. Perhaps I'd be better with some ND filters. Cheers Alastair > Diffraction occurs on the edge of the iris diaphragm. Because the diameter > of the aperture opening is determined by 2??r but the area of the aperture > is determined by ??r??, the greater the radius, the greater the > area:diameter ratio. Thus, the smaller the radius of the aperture, the > greater the impact of diffraction. The shorter the wavelength, the less > the diffraction, but it isn't much of a factor until you get to > 1,000-power on a microscope. > > > On Nov 27, 2010, at 6:11 PM, afirkin at afirkin.com wrote: > >> Diffraction Limits: >> >> The diffraction limit is dependent on the wavelength of the light and >> the >> f-stop. It is calculated as the size of an Airy disk (Sir George >> Airy). >> This describes the size of a circle from a point of light as it passes >> the edges of the aperture. Fundamentally, as you decrease the aperture >> size (increase the f-stop) the size of the Airy disks increases. An >> Airy >> disk can also be called a blur circle at the image plane similar to the >> CoC for DOF. The simplified calculation (estimation) is 1500 divided >> by >> the aperture. Thus, f/8 yields .005 mm and f/64 yields .042 mm. The >> relationship between the size of the Airy disk and resolution is known >> as >> the Rayleigh criteria. Since it takes two of these points of light to >> define resolution the respective resolutions are 100 lp/mm for f/8 and >> 12 >> lp/mm for f/64. Obviously, stopping down the aperture to increase >> depth >> of field can lead to increased diffraction that blurs the entire image. >> >> Most photographers would agree that 35mm cameras become diffraction >> limited at f/22. At smaller aperture sizes diffraction trumps depth of >> field and the overall image loses resolution. For a typical digital >> sensor size the diffraction limit is a factor at f/16. Diffraction >> limits are less significant with medium and large format cameras. This >> is only because there is less need for enlargement therefore the CoC >> values can be relaxed. >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Leica Users Group. >> See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information