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  2. Shutter speed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shutter_speed

    The shutter speed dial of a Nikkormat EL Slow shutter speed combined with panning the camera can achieve a motion blur for moving objects. In photography, shutter speed or exposure time is the length of time that the film or digital sensor inside the camera is exposed to light (that is, when the camera's shutter is open) when taking a ...

  3. Rolling shutter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rolling_shutter

    Images and video that suffer from rolling shutter distortion can be improved by algorithms that do rolling shutter rectification, or rolling shutter compensation. How to do this is an active area of research. [5] This effect can be used to gain secret keys from certain smart card readers. [6] [7]

  4. Shutter lag - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shutter_lag

    Improvements in technology, such as the speed, bandwidth and power consumption of processor chips and memory, as well as CCD technology and then CMOS sensors, have made shutter lag less of a problem. While digital SLRs have achieved lag times around 50 ms by the late 2000s, some EVILs take half as long in the 2010s.

  5. Long-exposure photography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long-exposure_photography

    Long-exposure, time-exposure, or slow-shutter photography involves using a long-duration shutter speed to sharply capture the stationary elements of images while blurring, smearing, or obscuring the moving elements. Long-exposure photography captures one element that conventional photography does not: an extended period of time.

  6. Exposure (photography) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exposure_(photography)

    As f /5.6 is 3 stops "faster" than f /16, with each stop meaning double the amount of light, a new shutter speed of (1/125)/(2·2·2) = 1/1000 s is needed. Once the photographer has determined the exposure, aperture stops can be traded for halvings or doublings of speed, within limits.

  7. Shutter (photography) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shutter_(photography)

    The shutter is constructed so that it automatically closes after a certain required time interval. The speed of the shutter is controlled either automatically by the camera based on the overall settings of the camera, manually through digital settings, or manually by a ring outside the camera on which various timings are marked.

  8. Image stabilization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image_stabilization

    For example, at a focal length of 125 mm on a 35 mm camera, vibration or camera shake could affect sharpness if the shutter speed is slower than 1 ⁄ 125 second. As a result of the 2-to-4.5-stops slower shutter speeds allowed by IS, an image taken at 1 ⁄ 125 second speed with an ordinary lens could be taken at 1 ⁄ 15 or 1 ⁄ 8 second with ...

  9. Digital camera modes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_camera_modes

    There are three exposure parameters – aperture, time (shutter speed), and sensitivity , and in different modes, these are each set automatically or manually; this gives 2 3 = 8 possible modes. For a given exposure, this is an underdetermined system , as there are three inputs but only one output.