Showing posts with label Optical Zoom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Optical Zoom. Show all posts

Sunday, April 22, 2018

Digital or Optical zoom for Security Cameras

Digital or Optical zoom for Security Cameras

When shopping for security dome cameras with zoom capabilities, the question I ask myself is which is more important; digital or optical zoom?  When speaking of surveillance cameras you want to get “close” to a subject from a fixed camera position. The zoom control on your digital camera will let you get “close” enough to capture that bigger image. It will also let you zoom out to include a wide angle of view. 

What is optical zoom?
Optical zoom is a true zoom lens, which is physically extend to magnify your subject. A motor controls the lens movement. 

What is digital zoom?
Digital zoom is simply some in-camera image processing, basically decreasing the apparent angle of view of a digital photographic or video image. To make the cropped area bigger, digital zoom makes up, or interpolates, pixels to add to the image, which may give less than satisfactory results.

Zoom meaning the ability to make something distant appear closer. Basically it’s a ratio of the longest and shortest focal length.
A 17mm (Wide) to 50mm (Tele) lens would be roughly 3x zoom. (50/17 = 2.94)
However a 70mm (Wide) - 200mm (Tele) lens would also be a roughly 3x zoom. (200/70 = 2.86) 

Summary:
1. Optical zoom uses lenses to zoom in on the image before the sensor captures it.
2. Digital zoom uses the processor to magnify the image after the sensor captures it.
3. Optical zoom preserves the crispness and detail of the image while digital zoom tends to interpolate a lot of the data.
4. Cameras with optical zoom are generally more expensive and bigger than cameras that only have digital zoom.
5. Constant adjusting of the zoom level in a camera with optical zoom might drain the battery a little bit faster.


Saturday, December 25, 2010

Optical vs Digital Zoom

After reading the title of this article, you might be asking yourself, “Zooming is just zooming, right?”  Is there really a difference between optical and digital zooming?  You may be surprised to learn that yes, there is definitely a difference.

Optical zoom is considered as true zooming.  In other words, the lens optics on the camera itself are used to zoom in on an object.  This is opposed to digital zooming, in which the camera processes an image internally and focuses on a certain portion of that image.  That certain portion is simply enlarged, thus creating a zoom effect.

One such term is zoom.  Pan-tilt-zoom (PTZ) cameras and some fixed cameras have lenses that zoom in on an object.  In other words, it magnifies the object of the video, such as a car in a parking lot, so that it can be seen in much better detail.

Zoom is a very important feature of video camera lenses.  By making the image larger, it is possible to watch intrusions developing from some distance away from the doors to a building.

In a secure parking lot, for example, if someone bypasses the guard shack, a zoom camera mounted on the side of a building over a hundred feet away should be able to capture easily the progression of the automobile as it gets closer to the building.  This gives time for a security guard to respond before the intruder is leaning over his shoulder with a gun pointed to his head.
This may seem to be an extreme example, but it is one of the things that separates zoom cameras from fixed ones.

When comparing the zoom features of a camera lens, it is absolutely critical to understand the difference between digital zoom and optical zoom.
Digital Zoom
Imagine that you are looking at a Rembrandt in a museum, and you want to get closer to a beautiful pastoral scene to see the master’s details of a country hillside.

Since the guard is paying attention, you have to settle for taking a regular picture of the Rembrandt from a safe distance away.  Then, you have the picture developed and you now hold in your hand the photo you took at the museum.

You have an idea.  Now that you have the picture in hand, you decide to get someone to blow up the picture on a copier so that you can see the hillside better.  At least, that’s what you think you’re going to get.

When you blow the picture up to the same size of the full original painting, you are disappointed.  Now, it just looks like a bad case of psoriasis and you have missed an opportunity to bring Rembrandt home with you.

Digital zoom is very similar to this.  It cuts out a section on a distant image, not actually getting you closer to the object but by magnifying the lack of clarity that already exists.  In other words, if you can’t tell what the details are from a distance, you won’t be able to tell what they are by making it seem closer by digitally manipulating the captured picture.

Digital zoom, while not exactly useless, does not actually help very much when you need to focus on an object as if you are standing much closer to it.

Optical Zoom
Put yourself back in the art museum for a moment.  You are standing in front of the Rembrandt and you really want to get closer to it so you can see the finer details of the hillside.  This time, you don’t have a camera.  Instead, the sleepy-faced guard has his head turned, and you jump over the barriers and put your eyes about six inches away from the painting.

Suddenly, all the details of the hillside are shown.  You see the individual blades of grass, the lines on the outer edges which distinguish an object from its background.  You can see it clearly, and your awe of Rembrandt grows to new heights.

Optical zoom is like standing closer to the object.
In our opening example about the car crashing the guard shack, it would be as if the security guard is only a few feet away from the automobile, allowing him to head off the intruder before he reaches the front door.


The value of optical zoom in video surveillance is priceless.  While it is not quite as good as you will see on television cop shows, it is still a great tool for keeping an eye on your property.