An array of millions of tiny light-sensitive cells designed to capture and image in a digital camera.
A lens incorporating gyroscopic sensors that detect camera shake and send compensating information to a suspended lens element to stabilize the image and reduce blurring.
A focusing point at which a lens produces a sharp image of very distant objects such as the horizon.
Electromagnet radiation, having a wavelength in the range 7,200 angstrom units to 1mm, found in the electromagnetic spectrum just beyond the red end of the visible spectrum. Although invisible to the eye it can be captured on infrared film.
An angled mirror in an SLR camera that facilitates through-the-lens viewing but flips up to expose the film or sensor while the shutter is open.
The process of inserting additional pixels into an image based on the values of adjacent existing pixels.
This states that the illumination of a plane surface normal to a point source is inversely proportional to the square of the distance from the source to the surface. For example, when the source to surface distance is doubled, the brightness of the surface is reduced to one quarter of its former value.