Click Here to
Order this information in Print

Click Here to
Order this information on CD-ROM

Click Here to
Download this information in PDF Format

 

Click here to make tpub.com your Home Page

Page Title: Figure 1-23.–Equal f/stops produce equal intensities
Back | Up | Next

Click here for a printable version

Google


Web
www.tpub.com

Home


   
Information Categories
.... Administration
Advancement
Aerographer
Automotive
Aviation
Combat
Construction
Diving
Draftsman
Engineering
Electronics
Food and Cooking
Math
Medical
Music
Nuclear Fundamentals
Photography
Religion
USMC
   
Products
  Educational CD-ROM's
Printed Manuals
Downloadable Books

   
Back
How to Use Lenses
Up
Photography (Basic) - Introduction to photography and other graphic techniques
Next
Table 1-1.–Comparison of f/stops with Amount of Light to Exposure Time

Figure 1-23.–Equal f/stops produce equal intensities. size, when desired, and is called an iris diaphragm. This opening is always concentric (centered) with, and perpendicular to the optical axis of the lens. Its location in the lens barrel is determined by the manufacturer when  the  lens  is  designed. Rotating the diaphragm control ring in the direction that reduces the size of the aperture is termed stopping down. Moving the control ring so it enlarges the aperture Figure 1-24.–Iris and iris diaphragm. size is termed opening up. When the diaphragm is set at the largest aperture, the lens is said to be wide open. The better the quality of the optics within the lens, the larger the possible maximum aperture. The size of the largest opening is the maximum working aperture of the lens and is called the lens speed. The diaphragm, along with the shutter, controls the amount of light passing through a lens, and hence the exposure the film receives. There are many different aperture sizes possible with the diaphragm, and each aperture size has a different value. Consequently, a system was devised for marking them so they could be used with consistency. The  factorial system has  become  the  most  widely  used. This system uses a set of markings commonly called the f/system. By using the diaphragm control ring, or lever, you can bring the index mark into line with the numbers that  indicate  the  measured  f/stop  of  the  aperture. Remember, as these index numbers increase in size, the opening decreases in size. Furthermore, these numbers are chosen by moving the index pointer to the next larger number, and the amount of light admitted is cut in half. The first or lowest number in the series is usually an 1-19

Privacy Statement - Press Release - Copyright Information. - Contact Us - Support Integrated Publishing