Diffraction limits of ResolutionDiffraction affects your image sharpness by limiting Depth of Field and useful Resolution. See how our camera and lens choices influence these limits.
|
|
Camera |
Pixel Size |
Min Aperture |
Min Aperture 2pixels |
comments |
|
Canon 20D/30D Rebel XT |
6.2um |
11 |
22 |
SLR |
|
Canon 40D, Rebel XTi |
5.6um |
10 |
20 |
SLR |
|
Canon Rebel XSi |
5.1um |
9 |
18 |
SLR |
|
Olympus E-420 |
4.5um |
8 |
16 |
SLR |
|
Nikon D60/D40x |
5.8um |
11 |
22 |
SLR |
|
Nikon D300 |
5.3um |
10 |
20 |
SLR |
|
Sony DSLR-A300 |
5.9um |
11 |
22 |
SLR |
|
Sony DSLR-A350 |
5um |
9 |
18 |
SLR |
|
Panasonic Lumix DMC-L10 |
4.5um |
8 |
16 |
SLR |
|
Leica V-LUX 1 |
1.9um |
3.5 |
7 |
Advanced P&S |
|
Fujifilm Finepix S100fs |
2.2um |
4 |
8 |
Advanced P&S |
|
Casio Exilim Pro EX-F1 |
2.4um |
4 |
8 |
Advanced P&S |
|
Canon Powershot G9 |
2.9um |
5 |
10 |
Advanced P&S |
This table does not indicate a maximum depth of field. Smaller sensors have a larger Depth of Field due to their focal length multiplication. Since the lens diameter and the distance from the sensor also limit the maximum aperture, the useful range for those cameras is very small.
Example Calculation
For a 1/2.5" sensor I calculated the pixel size like this:
The sensor diagonal dimension is z=25400um/2.5. With y=3/4x (the aspect ratio) and with

I easily calculated x=8128um and y=6096um. I can now calculate the pixel area to be:

, and by finding the square root, I came up with the pixel dimension. Using the formula above, I calculated the aperture for an Airy disc with a diameter of the size of a single pixel and for the Airy disc the size of two pixels.
Conclusion
I think it is important not to read too much into all those numbers, but it is nice to understand why pictures are sometimes not as sharp as we might expect.
When you are buying your next digital camera, do not obsess too much about resolution and technical mambo jumbo. If you funds are limited, buy a cheap DSLR instead of the latest flashy point and shoot model. You will end up with much more creative options and better-looking pictures.
Limiting the useful range of apertures, Point and Shoot cameras make it next to impossible to create shallow depth of field images. Cluttered portraits with in-focus backgrounds distract from the subjects. At the other end of the scale, you cannot get more depth of field by simply using smaller apertures. Many P&S already limit the minimum aperture via software.
Postscript
I wrote this article as a reference for future tutorials on the correct exposure. It is not necessary to understand everything, but it is helpful to know there is such a thing as diffraction limit and how to deal with it.

To increase Depth of Field we simply decrease aperture (larger f-stop). However, we cannot get infinite Depth of Field by decreasing our aperture infinitely. Diffraction establishes the upper limit to Depth of Field.



