Hi everyone,
I‘m new to the very technical stuff in photography so I was wondering about one thing.
I understand that the focal length is the distance between the hole of the lens and the sensor.
I hope I understand correctly that a FF lens and an APS-C lens with 50mm focal length have the same physical distance to the sensor, but will come out differently because of the crop factor.
However, now I’m wondering about iPhone and phone lenses in general; the iPhone 15 focal length for the main camera is 26mm. Now there is no way that the physical distance between hole and sensor is anything beyond the depth of the physical phone itself - is the FF equivalent shown instead? If yes, how is the 2x optical zoom the same focal length but just fewer pixels if its actual optical zoom? I thought the focal length should increase with optical zoom.
This got me wondering now whether non FF - APS-C - lenses have a print of the actual physical focal distance on them or if it‘s also the FF equivalent; for example, do the Sony FE 35mm F 1.4 G-Master and and Sony SEL35F18 have the same physical focal length of 35mm or is there already a conversion? Would i actually measure 35mm for both if I were to take out a measure tape?
Thanks in advance!
Videos
I am not sure if this is the best place to ask, but I need to motion track fome footage, that was shot on iPhone 12 Pro main camera. I need to know the exact sensor size and focal length so I can make accurate renders. I don't know the math behind calculating focal lengths, crop factors or image sensor size, so I need some help. When I look at information that comes with some photos it shows that it has 4mm focal length, but 26mm when it comes to 35mm sensor. This for some reason doesn't really check out when I work in 3d, so I need to get the real sensor size with real focal length value. In website specs I can only find this information: 12 MP, f/1.6, 26mm (wide), 1.4µm, dual pixel PDAF, OIS. I don't really know how to use this info, so I hope someone can help.