On Aug 25, 2006, at 12:32 PM, Toralf Lund wrote:

> I a way, yes, but with a "crop" sensor those pixels near the edge  
> simply
> won't be there at all. I'd prefer a slight fall-off, I think...

The issue is not confined to just a slight fall-off of illumination.  
With non-perpendicular light paths onto a sensor, diffraction around  
the edges of the photosite wells at corners add up to make chromatic  
aberration and moire which is difficult to correct, reducing  
resolution and quality.

> Also, don't you get the same kind of problems with a e.g. DX-size (!)
> sensor and a lens that's sufficiently wider to give an equivalent
> field-of-view?

Not if your lens design for the digital sensor is formulated to  
correct the ray trace so as to make the edge/corner rays more  
perpendicular to the sensor plane. This is done with a couple of  
correcting elements well behind the primary lens groups. Without a  
swinging mirror to deal with, fixed lens digital cameras with  
optimized lenses use correcting elements to align the light path with  
elements that very closely approach the sensor, minimizing photo-site  
well diffraction and moire effects, corner light fall off, etc.

Godfrey

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