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Wikipedia

Exposure value

In photography, exposure value (EV) is a number that represents a combination of a camera's shutter speed and f-number, such that all combinations that yield the same exposure have the same EV (for any fixed scene luminance). Exposure value is also used to indicate an interval on the photographic exposure scale, with a difference of 1 EV corresponding to a standard power-of-2 exposure step, commonly referred to as a stop.[1]

Fast shutter speed (short exposure time) of a breaking wave.
Slow shutter speed (long exposure time) of a breaking wave.

The EV concept was developed by the German shutter manufacturer Friedrich Deckel in the 1950s (Gebele 1958; Ray 2000, 318). Its intent was to simplify choosing among equivalent camera exposure settings by replacing combinations of shutter speed and f-number (e.g., 1/125 s at f/16) with a single number (e.g., 15). On some lenses with leaf shutters, the process was further simplified by allowing the shutter and aperture controls to be linked such that, when one was changed, the other was automatically adjusted to maintain the same exposure. This was especially helpful to beginners with limited understanding of the effects of shutter speed and aperture and the relationship between them. But it was also useful for experienced photographers who might choose a shutter speed to stop motion or an f-number for depth of field, because it allowed for faster adjustment—without the need for mental calculations—and reduced the chance of error when making the adjustment.

The concept became known as the Light Value System (LVS) in Europe; it was generally known as the Exposure Value System (EVS) when the features became available on cameras in the United States (Desfor 1957).

Because of mechanical considerations, the coupling of shutter and aperture was limited to lenses with leaf shutters; however, various automatic exposure modes now work to somewhat the same effect in cameras with focal-plane shutters.

The proper EV was determined by the scene luminance and film speed; it was intended that the system also include adjustment for filters, exposure compensation, and other variables. With all of these elements included, the camera would be set by transferring the single number thus determined.

Exposure value has been indicated in various ways. The ASA and ANSI standards used the quantity symbol Ev, with the subscript v indicating the logarithmic value; this symbol continues to be used in ISO standards, but the acronym EV is more common elsewhere. The Exif standard uses Ev (CIPA 2016).

Although all camera settings with the same EV nominally give the same exposure, they do not necessarily give the same picture. The f-number (relative aperture) determines the depth of field, and the shutter speed (exposure time) determines the amount of motion blur, as illustrated by the two images at the right (and at long exposure times, as a second-order effect, the light-sensitive medium may exhibit reciprocity failure, which is a change of light sensitivity dependent on the irradiance at the film).

Formal definition edit

 
Extended exposure time of 26 seconds

Exposure value is a base-2 logarithmic scale defined by (Ray 2000, 318):

 

where

EV 0 corresponds to an exposure time of 1 s and an aperture of f/1.0. If the EV is known, it can be used to select combinations of exposure time and f-number, as shown in Table 1.

Each increment of 1 in exposure value corresponds to a change of one "step" (or, more commonly, one "stop") in exposure, i.e., half as much exposure, either by halving the exposure time or halving the aperture area, or a combination of such changes. Greater exposure values are appropriate for photography in more brightly lit situations, or for lower ISO speeds.

Alternate form:

 

Camera settings vs. luminous exposure edit

 
Shutter with EV indicator (item 29) on a ring of EV values (item 34), figure from US patent 2829574, Inventor: K. Gebele, original assignee: Hans Deckel, filing date: Nov 2, 1953, issue date: Apr 8, 1958

"Exposure value" indicates combinations of camera settings rather than the luminous exposure (aka photometric exposure), which is given by (Ray 2000, 310)

 

where

The illuminance E is controlled by the f-number but also depends on the scene luminance. To avoid confusion, some authors (Ray 2000, 310) have used camera exposure to refer to combinations of camera settings. The 1964 ASA standard for automatic exposure controls for cameras, ASA PH2.15-1964, took the same approach, and also used the more descriptive term camera exposure settings.

Common practice among photographers is nonetheless to use "exposure" to refer to camera settings as well as to photometric exposure.

Relationship of camera settings to luminous exposure edit

The image-plane illuminance is directly proportional to the area of the aperture, and hence inversely proportional to the square of the lens f-number; thus

 

for constant lighting conditions, the exposure is constant as long as the ratio t/N2 is constant. If, for example, the f-number is changed, an equivalent exposure time can be determined from

 

Performing this calculation mentally is tedious for most photographers, but the equation is easily solved with a calculator dial on an exposure meter (Ray 2000, 318) or a similar dial on a standalone calculator. If the camera controls have detents, constant exposure can be maintained by counting the steps as one control is adjusted and counting an equivalent number of steps when adjusting the other control.

Representing camera settings: EV edit

 
Robert Kaufmann's posographe or exposure calculator from 1922

The ratio t/N2 could be used to represent equivalent combinations of exposure time and f-number in a single value. But for many such combinations used in general photography, the ratio gives a fractional value with a large denominator; this is notationally inconvenient as well as difficult to remember. Inverting this ratio and taking the base-2 logarithm allows defining a quantity Ev such that

 

resulting in a value that progresses in a linear sequence as camera exposure is changed in power-of-2 steps. For example, beginning with 1 s and f/1, decreasing exposure

gives the simple sequence

0, 1, 2, 3, ..., 14, 15, ...

The last two values shown frequently apply when using ISO 100 speed imaging media in outdoor photography.

This system provides its greatest benefit when using an exposure meter (or table) calibrated in EV with a camera that allows settings to be made in EV, especially with coupled shutter and aperture; the appropriate exposure is easily set on the camera, and choosing among equivalent settings is made by adjusting one control.

Current cameras do not allow direct setting of EV, and cameras with automatic exposure control generally obviate the need for it. EV can nonetheless be helpful when used to transfer recommended exposure settings from an exposure meter (or table of recommended exposures) to an exposure calculator (or table of camera settings).

EV as an indicator of camera settings edit

Used as an indicator of camera settings, EV corresponds to actual combinations of shutter speed and aperture setting. When the actual EV matches that recommended by the light level and the ISO speed, these settings should result in the "correct" exposure.

Exposure times, in seconds or minutes (m), for various exposure values and f-numbers
EV f-number
1.0 1.4 2.0 2.8 4.0 5.6 8.0 11 16 22 32 45 64
−6 60 2 m 4 m 8 m 16 m 32 m 64 m 128 m 256 m 512 m 1024 m 2048 m 4096 m
−5 30 60 2 m 4 m 8 m 16 m 32 m 64 m 128 m 256 m 512 m 1024 m 2048 m
−4 15 30 60 2 m 4 m 8 m 16 m 32 m 64 m 128 m 256 m 512 m 1024 m
−3 8 15 30 60 2 m 4 m 8 m 16 m 32 m 64 m 128 m 256 m 512 m
−2 4 8 15 30 60 2 m 4 m 8 m 16 m 32 m 64 m 128 m 256 m
−1 2 4 8 15 30 60 2 m 4 m 8 m 16 m 32 m 64 m 128 m
0 1 2 4 8 15 30 60 2 m 4 m 8 m 16 m 32 m 64 m
1 1/2 1 2 4 8 15 30 60 2 m 4 m 8 m 16 m 32 m
2 1/4 1/2 1 2 4 8 15 30 60 2 m 4 m 8 m 16 m
3 1/8 1/4 1/2 1 2 4 8 15 30 60 2 m 4 m 8 m
4 1/15 1/8 1/4 1/2 1 2 4 8 15 30 60 2 m 4 m
5 1/30 1/15 1/8 1/4 1/2 1 2 4 8 15 30 60 2 m
6 1/60 1/30 1/15 1/8 1/4 1/2 1 2 4 8 15 30 60
7 1/125 1/60 1/30 1/15 1/8 1/4 1/2 1 2 4 8 15 30
8 1/250 1/125 1/60 1/30 1/15 1/8 1/4 1/2 1 2 4 8 15
9 1/500 1/250 1/125 1/60 1/30 1/15 1/8 1/4 1/2 1 2 4 8
10 1/1000 1/500 1/250 1/125 1/60 1/30 1/15 1/8 1/4 1/2 1 2 4
11 1/2000 1/1000 1/500 1/250 1/125 1/60 1/30 1/15 1/8 1/4 1/2 1 2
12 1/4000 1/2000 1/1000 1/500 1/250 1/125 1/60 1/30 1/15 1/8 1/4 1/2 1
13 1/8000 1/4000 1/2000 1/1000 1/500 1/250 1/125 1/60 1/30 1/15 1/8 1/4 1/2
14 1/16000 1/8000 1/4000 1/2000 1/1000 1/500 1/250 1/125 1/60 1/30 1/15 1/8 1/4
15 1/32000 1/16000 1/8000 1/4000 1/2000 1/1000 1/500 1/250 1/125 1/60 1/30 1/15 1/8
16 1/32000 1/16000 1/8000 1/4000 1/2000 1/1000 1/500 1/250 1/125 1/60 1/30 1/15
17 1/32000 1/16000 1/8000 1/4000 1/2000 1/1000 1/500 1/250 1/125 1/60 1/30
18 1/32000 1/16000 1/8000 1/4000 1/2000 1/1000 1/500 1/250 1/125 1/60
19 1/32000 1/16000 1/8000 1/4000 1/2000 1/1000 1/500 1/250 1/125
20 1/32000 1/16000 1/8000 1/4000 1/2000 1/1000 1/500 1/250
21 1/32000 1/16000 1/8000 1/4000 1/2000 1/1000 1/500
EV 1.0 1.4 2.0 2.8 4.0 5.6 8.0 11 16 22 32 45 64
f-number


 
Popular exposure chart type, showing exposure values EV (red lines) as combinations of aperture and shutter speed values. The green lines are sample program lines, by which a digital camera automatically selects both the shutter speed and the aperture for given exposure value (brightness of light), when set to Program mode (P). (Canon, n.d.)

Relationship of EV to lighting conditions edit

"Correct" exposure is obtained when the f-number and exposure time match those "recommended" for given lighting conditions and ISO speed; the relationship is given by the exposure equation prescribed by ISO 2720:1974:

 

where[3]

Applied to the right-hand side of the exposure equation, exposure value is

 

If the common value of K = 12.5 (unit: cd s/m2 ISO) is used, an EV of zero (e.g., an aperture of f/1 and a shutter time of 1 sec) for ISO = 100 corresponds to a luminance of 0.125 cd/m2 (0.01 cd/ft2). At EV = 15 (the "sunny sixteen" amount of light) the luminance is 4096 cd/m2 (380 cd/ft2).

Camera settings also can be determined from incident-light measurements, for which the exposure equation is

 

where

  • E is the illuminance in lux seconds or lumens/m² seconds
  • C is the incident-light meter calibration constant

In terms of exposure value, the right-hand side becomes

 

When applied to the left-hand side of the exposure equation, EV denotes actual combinations of camera settings; when applied to the right-hand side, EV denotes combinations of camera settings required to give the nominally "correct" exposure. The formal relationship of EV to luminance or illuminance has limitations. Although it usually works well for typical outdoor scenes in daylight, it is less applicable to scenes with highly atypical luminance distributions, such as city skylines at night. In such situations, the EV that will result in the best picture often is better determined by subjective evaluation of photographs than by formal consideration of luminance or illuminance.

For a given luminance and film speed, a greater EV results in less exposure, and for fixed exposure (i.e., fixed camera settings), a greater EV corresponds to greater luminance or illuminance.

Illuminance is measured using a flat sensor; if the common value of C = 250 (unit: lux s ISO=lm s/m2 ISO) is used, an EV of zero (e.g., an aperture of f/1 and a shutter time of 1 sec) for ISO = 100 corresponds to an illuminance of 2.5 lux (0.23 fc). At EV = 15 (the "sunny sixteen" amount of light) the illuminance is 82,000 lux (7600 fc). For general photography, incident-light measurements are usually taken with a hemispherical sensor; the readings cannot be meaningfully related to illuminance.

Tabulated exposure values edit

An exposure meter may not always be available, and using a meter to determine exposure for some scenes with unusual lighting distribution may be difficult.[4] However, natural light, as well as many scenes with artificial lighting, is predictable, so that exposure often can be determined with reasonable accuracy from tabulated values.

 
Visualization of lighting conditions and corresponding exposure values, where the area of each circle is proportional to the amount of light in the scene. Note that each level includes the full area inside the circle, not merely the ring.
Table 2. Exposure values (ISO 100) for various lighting conditions[5]
Lighting condition EV100
Daylight
Light sand or snow in full or slightly hazy sunlight (distinct shadows)a 16
Typical scene in full or slightly hazy sunlight (distinct shadows)a, b 15
Typical scene in hazy sunlight (soft shadows) 14
Typical scene, cloudy bright (no shadows) 13
Typical scene, heavy overcast 12
Areas in open shade, clear sunlight 12
Outdoor, natural light
Rainbows
Clear sky background 15
Cloudy sky background 14
Sunsets and skylines
Just before sunset 12–14
At sunset 12
Just after sunset 9–11
The Moon,c altitude > 40°
Full 15
Gibbous 14
Quarter 13
Crescent 12
Blood 0 to 3[6]
Moonlight, Moon altitude > 40°
Full −3 to −2
Gibbous −4
Quarter −6
Aurora borealis and australis
Bright −4 to −3
Medium −6 to −5
Milky Way galactic center −11 to −9
Outdoor, artificial light
Neon and other bright signs 9–10
Night sports 9
Fires and burning buildings 9
Bright street scenes 8
Night street scenes and window displays 7–8
Night vehicle traffic 5
Fairs and amusement parks 7
Christmas tree lights 4–5
Floodlit buildings, monuments, and fountains 3–5
Distant views of lighted buildings 2
Indoor, artificial light
Galleries 8–11
Sports events, stage shows, and the like 8–9
Circuses, floodlit 8
Ice shows, floodlit 9
Offices and work areas 7–8
Home interiors 5–7
Christmas tree lights 4–5
  1. Values for direct sunlight apply between approximately two hours after sunrise and two hours before sunset, and assume front lighting. As a rough general rule, decrease EV by 1 for side lighting, and decrease EV by 2 for back lighting.
  2. This is approximately the value given by the sunny 16 rule.
  3. These values are appropriate for pictures of the Moon taken at night with a long lens or telescope, and will render the Moon as a medium tone. They will not, in general, be suitable for landscape pictures that include the Moon. In a landscape photograph, the Moon typically is near the horizon, where its luminance changes considerably with altitude. Moreover, a landscape photograph usually must take account of the sky and foreground as well as the Moon. Consequently, it is nearly impossible to give a single correct exposure value for such a situation.

Exposure values in Table 2 are reasonable general guidelines, but they should be used with caution. For simplicity, they are rounded to the nearest integer, and they omit numerous considerations described in the ANSI exposure guides from which they are derived. Moreover, they take no account of color shifts or reciprocity failure. Proper use of tabulated exposure values is explained in detail in the ANSI exposure guide, ANSI PH2.7-1986.

The exposure values in Table 2 are for ISO 100 speed ("EV100"). For a different ISO speed  , increase the exposure values (decrease the exposures) by the number of exposure steps by which that speed is greater than ISO 100, formally

 

For example, ISO 400 speed is two steps greater than ISO 100:

 

To photograph outdoor night sports with an ISO 400–speed imaging medium, search Table 2 for "Night sports" (which has an EV of 9 for ISO 100), and add 2 to get EV400 = 11.

For lower ISO speed, decrease the exposure values (increase the exposures) by the number of exposure steps by which the speed is less than ISO 100. For example, ISO 50 speed is one step less than ISO 100:

 

To photograph a rainbow against a cloudy sky with an ISO 50–speed imaging medium, search Table 2 for "Rainbows-Cloudy sky background" (which has an EV of 14), and subtract 1 to get EV50 = 13.

The equation for correcting for ISO speed can also be solved for EV100:

 

For example, using ISO 400 film and setting the camera for EV 11 allows shooting night sports at a light level of EV100 = 9, in agreement with the example done the other way around above. An online calculator that implemented this calculation was available at dpreview.com.[7]

Setting EV on a camera edit

 
Detail of front of Kodak Retina Ib 35mm camera (c. 1954) showing the EV setting ring that couples aperture and shutter speed settings
 
A Kodak Pony II camera (1957–1962) with exposure value setting ring. This camera has a fixed shutter speed, so the "EXP VALUE" ring simply sets the aperture.

On most cameras, there is no direct way to transfer an EV to camera settings; however, a few cameras, such as some Voigtländer and Braun models or the Kodak Pony II shown in the photo, allowed direct setting of exposure value.

 
Hasselblad Planar 80mm with EVS set at EV 12

Some medium-format cameras from Rollei (Rolleiflex, Rolleicord models) and Hasselblad allowed EV to be set on the lenses. The set EV could be locked, coupling shutter and aperture settings, such that adjusting either the shutter speed or aperture made a corresponding adjustment in the other to maintain a constant exposure (Ray 2000, 318). On some lenses the locking was optional, so that the photographer could choose the preferred method of working depending on the situation. Use of EV on some meters and cameras is discussed briefly by Adams (1981, 39). He notes that, in some cases, the EV indication from the meter may need to be adjusted for film speed.

Exposure compensation in EV edit

Many current cameras allow for exposure compensation, and usually state it in terms of EV (Ray 2000, 316). In this context, EV refers to the difference between the indicated and set exposures. For example, an exposure compensation of +1 EV (or +1 step) means to increase exposure, by using either a longer exposure time or a smaller f-number.

The sense of exposure compensation is opposite that of the EV scale itself. An increase in exposure corresponds to a decrease in EV, so an exposure compensation of +1 EV results in a smaller EV; conversely, an exposure compensation of −1 EV results in a greater EV. For example, if a meter reading of a lighter-than-normal subject indicates EV 16, and an exposure compensation of +1 EV is applied to render the subject appropriately, the final camera settings will correspond to EV 15.

Meter indication in EV edit

Some light meters (e.g., Pentax spot meters) indicate directly in EV at ISO 100. Some other meters, especially digital models, can indicate EV for the selected ISO speed. In most cases, this difference is irrelevant; with the Pentax meters, camera settings usually are determined using the exposure calculator, and most digital meters directly display shutter speeds and f-numbers.

Recently, articles on many web sites have used light value (LV) to denote EV at ISO 100. However, this term does not derive from a standards body, and has had several conflicting definitions.

EV and APEX edit

The Additive system of Photographic EXposure (APEX) proposed in the 1960 ASA standard for monochrome film speed, ASA PH2.5-1960, extended the concept of exposure value to all quantities in the exposure equation by taking base-2 logarithms, reducing application of the equation to simple addition and subtraction. In terms of exposure value, the left-hand side of the exposure equation became

 

where Av (aperture value) and Tv (time value) were defined as:

 

and

 

with

  • A the relative aperture (f-number)
  • T the exposure time ("shutter speed") in seconds[2]

Av and Tv represent the numbers of stops from f/1 and 1 second, respectively.

Use of APEX required logarithmic markings on aperture and shutter controls, however, and these never were incorporated in consumer cameras. With the inclusion of built-in exposure meters in most cameras shortly after APEX was proposed, the need to use the exposure equation was eliminated, and APEX saw little actual use.

Though it remains of little interest to the end user, APEX has seen a partial resurrection in the Exif standard, which calls for storing exposure data using APEX values. See Use of APEX values in Exif for additional discussion.

EV as a measure of luminance and illuminance edit

For a given ISO speed and meter calibration constant, there is a direct relationship between exposure value and luminance (or illuminance). Strictly, EV is not a measure of luminance or illuminance; rather, an EV corresponds to a luminance (or illuminance) for which a camera with a given ISO speed would use the indicated EV to obtain the nominally correct exposure. Nonetheless, it is common practice among photographic equipment manufacturers to express luminance in EV for ISO 100 speed, as when specifying metering range (Ray 2000, 318) or autofocus sensitivity. And the practice is long established; (Ray 2002, 592) cites Ulffers (1968) as an early example. Properly, the meter calibration constant as well as the ISO speed should be stated, but this seldom is done.

Values for the reflected-light calibration constant K vary slightly among manufacturers; a common choice is 12.5 (Canon, Nikon, and Sekonic[8]). Using K = 12.5, the relationship between EV at ISO 100 and luminance L is then

 

Values of luminance at various values of EV based on this relationship are shown in Table 3. Using this relationship, a reflected-light exposure meter that indicates in EV can be used to determine luminance.

Exposure value vs. Luminance (ISO 100, K = 12.5) and Illuminance (ISO 100, C = 250)
EV100 Luminance Illuminance
cd/m2 fL lx fc
−4 0.008 0.0023 0.156 0.015
−3 0.016 0.0046 0.313 0.029
−2 0.031 0.0091 0.625 0.058
−1 0.063 0.018 1.25 0.116
0 0.125 0.036 2.5 0.232
1 0.25 0.073 5 0.465
2 0.5 0.146 10 0.929
3 1 0.292 20 1.86
4 2 0.584 40 3.72
5 4 1.17 80 7.43
6 8 2.33 160 14.9
7 16 4.67 320 29.7
8 32 9.34 640 59.5
9 64 18.7 1280 119
10 128 37.4 2560 238
11 256 74.7 5120 476
12 512 149 10,240 951
13 1024 299 20,480 1903
14 2048 598 40,960 3805
15 4096 1195 81,920 7611
16 8192 2391 163,840 15,221

As with luminance, common practice among photographic equipment manufacturers is to express illuminance in EV for ISO 100 speed when specifying metering range.[9]

The situation with incident-light meters is more complicated than that for reflected-light meters, because the calibration constant C depends on the sensor type. Two sensor types are common: flat (cosine-responding) and hemispherical (cardioid-responding). Illuminance is measured with a flat sensor; a typical value for C is 250 with illuminance in lux. Using C = 250, the relationship between EV at ISO 100 and illuminance E is then

 

Values of illuminance at various values of EV based on this relationship are shown in the table to the right. Using this relationship, an incident-light exposure meter that indicates in EV can be used to determine illuminance.

Although illuminance measurements may indicate appropriate exposure for a flat subject, they are less useful for a typical scene in which many elements are not flat and are at various orientations to the camera. For determining practical photographic exposure, a hemispherical sensor has proven more effective. With a hemispherical sensor, typical values for C are between 320 (Minolta) and 340 (Sekonic) with illuminance in lux. If illuminance is interpreted loosely, measurements with a hemispherical sensor indicate "scene illuminance".

Exposure meter calibration is discussed in detail in the Light meter article.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In optics, the term "stop" properly refers to the aperture itself, while the term "step" refers to a division of the exposure scale. Some authors, e.g., Davis (1999, 13), prefer the term "stop" because they refer to steps (e.g., on a step tablet) that are other than powers of 2. ISO standards generally use "step", while photographers normally use "stop".
  2. ^ a b c In a mathematical expression involving physical quantities, it is common practice to require that the argument to a transcendental function (such as the logarithm) be dimensionless. The definition of EV ignores the units in the denominator and uses only the numerical value of the exposure time in seconds; EV is not the expression of a physical law, but simply a number for encoding combinations of camera settings.
  3. ^ Symbols for the quantities in the exposure equation have varied over time; the symbols used in this article reflect current practice for many authors, such as Ray (2000).
  4. ^ Appendix C of ANSI PH3.49-1971 noted this possibility "when the background luminance within the field is radically different from the subject luminance", and further stated "In this kind of scene, a meter reading of the integrated luminance (Ba) of the whole scene may not lead to the best picture."
  5. ^ Exposure values in Table 2 are taken from ANSI exposure guides PH2.7-1973 and PH2.7-1986; where the two guides differ, ranges of values have been given or extended. The ANSI guides were derived from studies by Loyd A. Jones and H.R. Condit, described in Jones and Condit (1941), Jones and Condit (1948), and Jones and Condit (1949).
  6. ^ See exposure parameters at pictures in subcategories of 21st century lunar eclipses in Commons.
  7. ^ Exposure at dpreview.com November 12, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Specifications for Sekonic light meters are available on the Sekonic web site under "Products".
  9. ^ The metering range for an incident-light meter specified in EV at ISO 100 usually applies to a hemispherical sensor, so strictly speaking, it does not directly relate to illuminance.

References edit

  • Adams, Ansel. 1981. The Negative. Boston: New York Graphic Society. ISBN 0-8212-1131-5
  • ANSI PH2.7-1973. American National Standard Photographic Exposure Guide. New York: American National Standards Institute. Superseded by ANSI PH2.7-1986
  • ANSI PH2.7-1986. American National Standard for Photography — Photographic Exposure Guide. New York: American National Standards Institute.
  • ASA PH2.5-1960. American Standard Method for Determining Speed of photographic Negative Materials (Monochrome, Continuous Tone). New York: United States of America Standards Institute.
  • ASA PH2.15-1964 (R1976). American Standard: Automatic Exposure Controls for Cameras. New York: United States of America Standards Institute.
  • "Camera and Imaging Products Association". 2016. Exchangeable image file format for digital still cameras: Exif Version 2.31 2019-07-12 at the Wayback Machine (PDF).
  • Canon. n.d. "Camera settings: Shooting modes" 2013-05-27 at the Wayback Machine. Canon Professional Network. Retrieved 5 December 2016.
  • CIPA. See Camera and Imaging Products Association.
  • Davis, Phil. 1999. Beyond the Zone System 2007-03-10 at the Wayback Machine, 4th ed. Boston: Focal Press. ISBN 0-240-80343-4
  • Desfor, Irving. 1957. "F-Stops On Cameras Discarded; Pick Number From 4 To 18". Arizona Republic, September 1.
  • Gebele, Kurt. 1958. Photographic Shutter. US Patent 2,829,574, filed 2 November 1953, and issued 8 April 1958.
  • Jones, Loyd A., and H. R. Condit. 1941. "The Brightness Scale of Exterior Scenes and the Computation of Correct Photographic Exposure". Journal of the Optical Society of America 31:11, Nov. 1941, 651–678.
  • Jones, Loyd A., and H. R. Condit. 1948. "Sunlight and skylight as determinants of Photographic exposure. I. Luminous density as determined by solar altitude and atmospheric conditions". Journal of the Optical Society of America 38:2, Feb. 1948, 123–178.
  • Jones, Loyd A., and H. R. Condit. 1949. "Sunlight and skylight as determinants of Photographic exposure. II. Scene structure, directional index, photographic efficiency of daylight, safety factors, and evaluation of camera exposure". Journal of the Optical Society of America 39:2, Feb. 1949, 94–135.
  • Ray, Sidney F. 2000. "Camera Exposure Determination". In The Manual of Photography: Photographic and Digital Imaging, 9th ed. Ed. Ralph E. Jacobson, Sidney F. Ray, Geoffrey G. Atteridge, and Norman R. Axford. Oxford: Focal Press. ISBN 0-240-51574-9
  • Ray, Sidney F. 2002. . 3rd ed. Oxford: Focal Press. ISBN 0-240-51540-4
  • Ulffers, D. 1968. "Sensitivity Specifications of Exposure Meters". British Journal of Photography 115, 47.

Further reading edit

  • Eastman Kodak Company. Existing-Light Photography, 3rd ed. Rochester, NY: Silver Pixel Press, 1996. ISBN 0-87985-744-7

External links edit

  • Doug Kerr, "Setting Camera Exposure in Terms of Ev" (PDF)

exposure, value, photography, exposure, value, number, that, represents, combination, camera, shutter, speed, number, such, that, combinations, that, yield, same, exposure, have, same, fixed, scene, luminance, also, used, indicate, interval, photographic, expo. In photography exposure value EV is a number that represents a combination of a camera s shutter speed and f number such that all combinations that yield the same exposure have the same EV for any fixed scene luminance Exposure value is also used to indicate an interval on the photographic exposure scale with a difference of 1 EV corresponding to a standard power of 2 exposure step commonly referred to as a stop 1 Fast shutter speed short exposure time of a breaking wave Slow shutter speed long exposure time of a breaking wave The EV concept was developed by the German shutter manufacturer Friedrich Deckel in the 1950s Gebele 1958 Ray 2000 318 Its intent was to simplify choosing among equivalent camera exposure settings by replacing combinations of shutter speed and f number e g 1 125 s at f 16 with a single number e g 15 On some lenses with leaf shutters the process was further simplified by allowing the shutter and aperture controls to be linked such that when one was changed the other was automatically adjusted to maintain the same exposure This was especially helpful to beginners with limited understanding of the effects of shutter speed and aperture and the relationship between them But it was also useful for experienced photographers who might choose a shutter speed to stop motion or an f number for depth of field because it allowed for faster adjustment without the need for mental calculations and reduced the chance of error when making the adjustment The concept became known as the Light Value System LVS in Europe it was generally known as the Exposure Value System EVS when the features became available on cameras in the United States Desfor 1957 Because of mechanical considerations the coupling of shutter and aperture was limited to lenses with leaf shutters however various automatic exposure modes now work to somewhat the same effect in cameras with focal plane shutters The proper EV was determined by the scene luminance and film speed it was intended that the system also include adjustment for filters exposure compensation and other variables With all of these elements included the camera would be set by transferring the single number thus determined Exposure value has been indicated in various ways The ASA and ANSI standards used the quantity symbol Ev with the subscript v indicating the logarithmic value this symbol continues to be used in ISO standards but the acronym EV is more common elsewhere The Exif standard uses Ev CIPA 2016 Although all camera settings with the same EV nominally give the same exposure they do not necessarily give the same picture The f number relative aperture determines the depth of field and the shutter speed exposure time determines the amount of motion blur as illustrated by the two images at the right and at long exposure times as a second order effect the light sensitive medium may exhibit reciprocity failure which is a change of light sensitivity dependent on the irradiance at the film Contents 1 Formal definition 2 Camera settings vs luminous exposure 2 1 Relationship of camera settings to luminous exposure 2 2 Representing camera settings EV 3 EV as an indicator of camera settings 4 Relationship of EV to lighting conditions 5 Tabulated exposure values 6 Setting EV on a camera 7 Exposure compensation in EV 8 Meter indication in EV 9 EV and APEX 10 EV as a measure of luminance and illuminance 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksFormal definition edit nbsp Extended exposure time of 26 seconds Exposure value is a base 2 logarithmic scale defined by Ray 2000 318 E V log 2 N 2 t displaystyle mathrm EV log 2 frac N 2 t nbsp where N is the f number t is the exposure time shutter speed in seconds 2 EV 0 corresponds to an exposure time of 1 s and an aperture of f 1 0 If the EV is known it can be used to select combinations of exposure time and f number as shown in Table 1 Each increment of 1 in exposure value corresponds to a change of one step or more commonly one stop in exposure i e half as much exposure either by halving the exposure time or halving the aperture area or a combination of such changes Greater exposure values are appropriate for photography in more brightly lit situations or for lower ISO speeds Alternate form E V 2 log 2 N log 2 t displaystyle EV 2 log 2 N log 2 t nbsp Camera settings vs luminous exposure edit nbsp Shutter with EV indicator item 29 on a ring of EV values item 34 figure from US patent 2829574 Inventor K Gebele original assignee Hans Deckel filing date Nov 2 1953 issue date Apr 8 1958 Exposure value indicates combinations of camera settings rather than the luminous exposure aka photometric exposure which is given by Ray 2000 310 H E t displaystyle H Et nbsp where H is the luminous photometric exposure lux seconds E is the image plane illuminance lux or lumens m t is the exposure time shutter speed seconds The illuminance E is controlled by the f number but also depends on the scene luminance To avoid confusion some authors Ray 2000 310 have used camera exposure to refer to combinations of camera settings The 1964 ASA standard for automatic exposure controls for cameras ASA PH2 15 1964 took the same approach and also used the more descriptive term camera exposure settings Common practice among photographers is nonetheless to use exposure to refer to camera settings as well as to photometric exposure Relationship of camera settings to luminous exposure edit The image plane illuminance is directly proportional to the area of the aperture and hence inversely proportional to the square of the lens f number thus H t N 2 displaystyle H propto frac t N 2 nbsp for constant lighting conditions the exposure is constant as long as the ratio t N2 is constant If for example the f number is changed an equivalent exposure time can be determined from t 2 t 1 N 2 2 N 1 2 displaystyle frac t 2 t 1 frac N 2 2 N 1 2 nbsp Performing this calculation mentally is tedious for most photographers but the equation is easily solved with a calculator dial on an exposure meter Ray 2000 318 or a similar dial on a standalone calculator If the camera controls have detents constant exposure can be maintained by counting the steps as one control is adjusted and counting an equivalent number of steps when adjusting the other control Representing camera settings EV edit nbsp Robert Kaufmann s posographe or exposure calculator from 1922 The ratio t N2 could be used to represent equivalent combinations of exposure time and f number in a single value But for many such combinations used in general photography the ratio gives a fractional value with a large denominator this is notationally inconvenient as well as difficult to remember Inverting this ratio and taking the base 2 logarithm allows defining a quantity Ev such that E v log 2 N 2 t displaystyle E mathrm v log 2 frac N 2 t nbsp resulting in a value that progresses in a linear sequence as camera exposure is changed in power of 2 steps For example beginning with 1 s and f 1 decreasing exposuregives the simple sequence 0 1 2 3 14 15 The last two values shown frequently apply when using ISO 100 speed imaging media in outdoor photography This system provides its greatest benefit when using an exposure meter or table calibrated in EV with a camera that allows settings to be made in EV especially with coupled shutter and aperture the appropriate exposure is easily set on the camera and choosing among equivalent settings is made by adjusting one control Current cameras do not allow direct setting of EV and cameras with automatic exposure control generally obviate the need for it EV can nonetheless be helpful when used to transfer recommended exposure settings from an exposure meter or table of recommended exposures to an exposure calculator or table of camera settings EV as an indicator of camera settings editUsed as an indicator of camera settings EV corresponds to actual combinations of shutter speed and aperture setting When the actual EV matches that recommended by the light level and the ISO speed these settings should result in the correct exposure Exposure times in seconds or minutes m for various exposure values and f numbers EV f number 1 0 1 4 2 0 2 8 4 0 5 6 8 0 11 16 22 32 45 64 6 60 2 m 4 m 8 m 16 m 32 m 64 m 128 m 256 m 512 m 1024 m 2048 m 4096 m 5 30 60 2 m 4 m 8 m 16 m 32 m 64 m 128 m 256 m 512 m 1024 m 2048 m 4 15 30 60 2 m 4 m 8 m 16 m 32 m 64 m 128 m 256 m 512 m 1024 m 3 8 15 30 60 2 m 4 m 8 m 16 m 32 m 64 m 128 m 256 m 512 m 2 4 8 15 30 60 2 m 4 m 8 m 16 m 32 m 64 m 128 m 256 m 1 2 4 8 15 30 60 2 m 4 m 8 m 16 m 32 m 64 m 128 m 0 1 2 4 8 15 30 60 2 m 4 m 8 m 16 m 32 m 64 m 1 1 2 1 2 4 8 15 30 60 2 m 4 m 8 m 16 m 32 m 2 1 4 1 2 1 2 4 8 15 30 60 2 m 4 m 8 m 16 m 3 1 8 1 4 1 2 1 2 4 8 15 30 60 2 m 4 m 8 m 4 1 15 1 8 1 4 1 2 1 2 4 8 15 30 60 2 m 4 m 5 1 30 1 15 1 8 1 4 1 2 1 2 4 8 15 30 60 2 m 6 1 60 1 30 1 15 1 8 1 4 1 2 1 2 4 8 15 30 60 7 1 125 1 60 1 30 1 15 1 8 1 4 1 2 1 2 4 8 15 30 8 1 250 1 125 1 60 1 30 1 15 1 8 1 4 1 2 1 2 4 8 15 9 1 500 1 250 1 125 1 60 1 30 1 15 1 8 1 4 1 2 1 2 4 8 10 1 1000 1 500 1 250 1 125 1 60 1 30 1 15 1 8 1 4 1 2 1 2 4 11 1 2000 1 1000 1 500 1 250 1 125 1 60 1 30 1 15 1 8 1 4 1 2 1 2 12 1 4000 1 2000 1 1000 1 500 1 250 1 125 1 60 1 30 1 15 1 8 1 4 1 2 1 13 1 8000 1 4000 1 2000 1 1000 1 500 1 250 1 125 1 60 1 30 1 15 1 8 1 4 1 2 14 1 16000 1 8000 1 4000 1 2000 1 1000 1 500 1 250 1 125 1 60 1 30 1 15 1 8 1 4 15 1 32000 1 16000 1 8000 1 4000 1 2000 1 1000 1 500 1 250 1 125 1 60 1 30 1 15 1 8 16 1 32000 1 16000 1 8000 1 4000 1 2000 1 1000 1 500 1 250 1 125 1 60 1 30 1 15 17 1 32000 1 16000 1 8000 1 4000 1 2000 1 1000 1 500 1 250 1 125 1 60 1 30 18 1 32000 1 16000 1 8000 1 4000 1 2000 1 1000 1 500 1 250 1 125 1 60 19 1 32000 1 16000 1 8000 1 4000 1 2000 1 1000 1 500 1 250 1 125 20 1 32000 1 16000 1 8000 1 4000 1 2000 1 1000 1 500 1 250 21 1 32000 1 16000 1 8000 1 4000 1 2000 1 1000 1 500 EV 1 0 1 4 2 0 2 8 4 0 5 6 8 0 11 16 22 32 45 64 f number nbsp Popular exposure chart type showing exposure values EV red lines as combinations of aperture and shutter speed values The green lines are sample program lines by which a digital camera automatically selects both the shutter speed and the aperture for given exposure value brightness of light when set to Program mode P Canon n d Relationship of EV to lighting conditions edit Correct exposure is obtained when the f number and exposure time match those recommended for given lighting conditions and ISO speed the relationship is given by the exposure equation prescribed by ISO 2720 1974 N 2 t L S K displaystyle frac N 2 t frac LS K nbsp where 3 N is the relative aperture f number t is the exposure time shutter speed in seconds 2 L is the average scene luminance S is the ISO arithmetic speed K is the reflected light meter calibration constant Applied to the right hand side of the exposure equation exposure value is E V log 2 L S K displaystyle mathrm EV log 2 frac LS K nbsp If the common value of K 12 5 unit cd s m2 ISO is used an EV of zero e g an aperture of f 1 and a shutter time of 1 sec for ISO 100 corresponds to a luminance of 0 125 cd m2 0 01 cd ft2 At EV 15 the sunny sixteen amount of light the luminance is 4096 cd m2 380 cd ft2 Camera settings also can be determined from incident light measurements for which the exposure equation is N 2 t E S C displaystyle frac N 2 t frac ES C nbsp where E is the illuminance in lux seconds or lumens m seconds C is the incident light meter calibration constant In terms of exposure value the right hand side becomes E V log 2 E S C displaystyle mathrm EV log 2 frac ES C nbsp When applied to the left hand side of the exposure equation EV denotes actual combinations of camera settings when applied to the right hand side EV denotes combinations of camera settings required to give the nominally correct exposure The formal relationship of EV to luminance or illuminance has limitations Although it usually works well for typical outdoor scenes in daylight it is less applicable to scenes with highly atypical luminance distributions such as city skylines at night In such situations the EV that will result in the best picture often is better determined by subjective evaluation of photographs than by formal consideration of luminance or illuminance For a given luminance and film speed a greater EV results in less exposure and for fixed exposure i e fixed camera settings a greater EV corresponds to greater luminance or illuminance Illuminance is measured using a flat sensor if the common value of C 250 unit lux s ISO lm s m2 ISO is used an EV of zero e g an aperture of f 1 and a shutter time of 1 sec for ISO 100 corresponds to an illuminance of 2 5 lux 0 23 fc At EV 15 the sunny sixteen amount of light the illuminance is 82 000 lux 7600 fc For general photography incident light measurements are usually taken with a hemispherical sensor the readings cannot be meaningfully related to illuminance Tabulated exposure values editAn exposure meter may not always be available and using a meter to determine exposure for some scenes with unusual lighting distribution may be difficult 4 However natural light as well as many scenes with artificial lighting is predictable so that exposure often can be determined with reasonable accuracy from tabulated values nbsp Visualization of lighting conditions and corresponding exposure values where the area of each circle is proportional to the amount of light in the scene Note that each level includes the full area inside the circle not merely the ring Table 2 Exposure values ISO 100 for various lighting conditions 5 Lighting condition EV100 Daylight Light sand or snow in full or slightly hazy sunlight distinct shadows a 16 Typical scene in full or slightly hazy sunlight distinct shadows a b 15 Typical scene in hazy sunlight soft shadows 14 Typical scene cloudy bright no shadows 13 Typical scene heavy overcast 12 Areas in open shade clear sunlight 12 Outdoor natural light Rainbows Clear sky background 15 Cloudy sky background 14 Sunsets and skylines Just before sunset 12 14 At sunset 12 Just after sunset 9 11 The Moon c altitude gt 40 Full 15 Gibbous 14 Quarter 13 Crescent 12 Blood 0 to 3 6 Moonlight Moon altitude gt 40 Full 3 to 2 Gibbous 4 Quarter 6 Aurora borealis and australis Bright 4 to 3 Medium 6 to 5 Milky Way galactic center 11 to 9 Outdoor artificial light Neon and other bright signs 9 10 Night sports 9 Fires and burning buildings 9 Bright street scenes 8 Night street scenes and window displays 7 8 Night vehicle traffic 5 Fairs and amusement parks 7 Christmas tree lights 4 5 Floodlit buildings monuments and fountains 3 5 Distant views of lighted buildings 2 Indoor artificial light Galleries 8 11 Sports events stage shows and the like 8 9 Circuses floodlit 8 Ice shows floodlit 9 Offices and work areas 7 8 Home interiors 5 7 Christmas tree lights 4 5 Values for direct sunlight apply between approximately two hours after sunrise and two hours before sunset and assume front lighting As a rough general rule decrease EV by 1 for side lighting and decrease EV by 2 for back lighting This is approximately the value given by the sunny 16 rule These values are appropriate for pictures of the Moon taken at night with a long lens or telescope and will render the Moon as a medium tone They will not in general be suitable for landscape pictures that include the Moon In a landscape photograph the Moon typically is near the horizon where its luminance changes considerably with altitude Moreover a landscape photograph usually must take account of the sky and foreground as well as the Moon Consequently it is nearly impossible to give a single correct exposure value for such a situation Exposure values in Table 2 are reasonable general guidelines but they should be used with caution For simplicity they are rounded to the nearest integer and they omit numerous considerations described in the ANSI exposure guides from which they are derived Moreover they take no account of color shifts or reciprocity failure Proper use of tabulated exposure values is explained in detail in the ANSI exposure guide ANSI PH2 7 1986 The exposure values in Table 2 are for ISO 100 speed EV100 For a different ISO speed S displaystyle S nbsp increase the exposure values decrease the exposures by the number of exposure steps by which that speed is greater than ISO 100 formally E V S E V 100 log 2 S 100 displaystyle mathrm EV S mathrm EV 100 log 2 frac S 100 nbsp For example ISO 400 speed is two steps greater than ISO 100 E V 400 E V 100 log 2 400 100 E V 100 2 displaystyle mathrm EV 400 mathrm EV 100 log 2 frac 400 100 mathrm EV 100 2 nbsp To photograph outdoor night sports with an ISO 400 speed imaging medium search Table 2 for Night sports which has an EV of 9 for ISO 100 and add 2 to get EV400 11 For lower ISO speed decrease the exposure values increase the exposures by the number of exposure steps by which the speed is less than ISO 100 For example ISO 50 speed is one step less than ISO 100 E V 50 E V 100 log 2 50 100 E V 100 1 displaystyle mathrm EV 50 mathrm EV 100 log 2 frac 50 100 mathrm EV 100 1 nbsp To photograph a rainbow against a cloudy sky with an ISO 50 speed imaging medium search Table 2 for Rainbows Cloudy sky background which has an EV of 14 and subtract 1 to get EV50 13 The equation for correcting for ISO speed can also be solved for EV100 E V 100 E V S log 2 S 100 displaystyle mathrm EV 100 mathrm EV S log 2 frac S 100 nbsp For example using ISO 400 film and setting the camera for EV 11 allows shooting night sports at a light level of EV100 9 in agreement with the example done the other way around above An online calculator that implemented this calculation was available at dpreview com 7 Setting EV on a camera edit nbsp Detail of front of Kodak Retina Ib 35mm camera c 1954 showing the EV setting ring that couples aperture and shutter speed settings nbsp A Kodak Pony II camera 1957 1962 with exposure value setting ring This camera has a fixed shutter speed so the EXP VALUE ring simply sets the aperture On most cameras there is no direct way to transfer an EV to camera settings however a few cameras such as some Voigtlander and Braun models or the Kodak Pony II shown in the photo allowed direct setting of exposure value nbsp Hasselblad Planar 80mm with EVS set at EV 12 Some medium format cameras from Rollei Rolleiflex Rolleicord models and Hasselblad allowed EV to be set on the lenses The set EV could be locked coupling shutter and aperture settings such that adjusting either the shutter speed or aperture made a corresponding adjustment in the other to maintain a constant exposure Ray 2000 318 On some lenses the locking was optional so that the photographer could choose the preferred method of working depending on the situation Use of EV on some meters and cameras is discussed briefly by Adams 1981 39 He notes that in some cases the EV indication from the meter may need to be adjusted for film speed Exposure compensation in EV editMany current cameras allow for exposure compensation and usually state it in terms of EV Ray 2000 316 In this context EV refers to the difference between the indicated and set exposures For example an exposure compensation of 1 EV or 1 step means to increase exposure by using either a longer exposure time or a smaller f number The sense of exposure compensation is opposite that of the EV scale itself An increase in exposure corresponds to a decrease in EV so an exposure compensation of 1 EV results in a smaller EV conversely an exposure compensation of 1 EV results in a greater EV For example if a meter reading of a lighter than normal subject indicates EV 16 and an exposure compensation of 1 EV is applied to render the subject appropriately the final camera settings will correspond to EV 15 Meter indication in EV editSome light meters e g Pentax spot meters indicate directly in EV at ISO 100 Some other meters especially digital models can indicate EV for the selected ISO speed In most cases this difference is irrelevant with the Pentax meters camera settings usually are determined using the exposure calculator and most digital meters directly display shutter speeds and f numbers Recently articles on many web sites have used light value LV to denote EV at ISO 100 However this term does not derive from a standards body and has had several conflicting definitions EV and APEX editMain article APEX system The Additive system of Photographic EXposure APEX proposed in the 1960 ASA standard for monochrome film speed ASA PH2 5 1960 extended the concept of exposure value to all quantities in the exposure equation by taking base 2 logarithms reducing application of the equation to simple addition and subtraction In terms of exposure value the left hand side of the exposure equation became E v A v T v displaystyle E v A v T v nbsp where Av aperture value and Tv time value were defined as A v log 2 A 2 displaystyle A v log 2 A 2 nbsp and T v log 2 1 T displaystyle T v log 2 1 T nbsp with A the relative aperture f number T the exposure time shutter speed in seconds 2 Av and Tv represent the numbers of stops from f 1 and 1 second respectively Use of APEX required logarithmic markings on aperture and shutter controls however and these never were incorporated in consumer cameras With the inclusion of built in exposure meters in most cameras shortly after APEX was proposed the need to use the exposure equation was eliminated and APEX saw little actual use Though it remains of little interest to the end user APEX has seen a partial resurrection in the Exif standard which calls for storing exposure data using APEX values See Use of APEX values in Exif for additional discussion EV as a measure of luminance and illuminance editFor a given ISO speed and meter calibration constant there is a direct relationship between exposure value and luminance or illuminance Strictly EV is not a measure of luminance or illuminance rather an EV corresponds to a luminance or illuminance for which a camera with a given ISO speed would use the indicated EV to obtain the nominally correct exposure Nonetheless it is common practice among photographic equipment manufacturers to express luminance in EV for ISO 100 speed as when specifying metering range Ray 2000 318 or autofocus sensitivity And the practice is long established Ray 2002 592 cites Ulffers 1968 as an early example Properly the meter calibration constant as well as the ISO speed should be stated but this seldom is done Values for the reflected light calibration constant K vary slightly among manufacturers a common choice is 12 5 Canon Nikon and Sekonic 8 Using K 12 5 the relationship between EV at ISO 100 and luminance L is then L 2 E V 3 displaystyle L 2 mathrm EV 3 nbsp Values of luminance at various values of EV based on this relationship are shown in Table 3 Using this relationship a reflected light exposure meter that indicates in EV can be used to determine luminance Exposure value vs Luminance ISO 100 K 12 5 and Illuminance ISO 100 C 250 EV100 Luminance Illuminance cd m2 fL lx fc 4 0 008 0 0023 0 156 0 015 3 0 016 0 0046 0 313 0 029 2 0 031 0 0091 0 625 0 058 1 0 063 0 018 1 25 0 116 0 0 125 0 036 2 5 0 232 1 0 25 0 073 5 0 465 2 0 5 0 146 10 0 929 3 1 0 292 20 1 86 4 2 0 584 40 3 72 5 4 1 17 80 7 43 6 8 2 33 160 14 9 7 16 4 67 320 29 7 8 32 9 34 640 59 5 9 64 18 7 1280 119 10 128 37 4 2560 238 11 256 74 7 5120 476 12 512 149 10 240 951 13 1024 299 20 480 1903 14 2048 598 40 960 3805 15 4096 1195 81 920 7611 16 8192 2391 163 840 15 221 As with luminance common practice among photographic equipment manufacturers is to express illuminance in EV for ISO 100 speed when specifying metering range 9 The situation with incident light meters is more complicated than that for reflected light meters because the calibration constant C depends on the sensor type Two sensor types are common flat cosine responding and hemispherical cardioid responding Illuminance is measured with a flat sensor a typical value for C is 250 with illuminance in lux Using C 250 the relationship between EV at ISO 100 and illuminance E is then E 2 5 2 E V displaystyle E 2 5 times 2 mathrm EV nbsp Values of illuminance at various values of EV based on this relationship are shown in the table to the right Using this relationship an incident light exposure meter that indicates in EV can be used to determine illuminance Although illuminance measurements may indicate appropriate exposure for a flat subject they are less useful for a typical scene in which many elements are not flat and are at various orientations to the camera For determining practical photographic exposure a hemispherical sensor has proven more effective With a hemispherical sensor typical values for C are between 320 Minolta and 340 Sekonic with illuminance in lux If illuminance is interpreted loosely measurements with a hemispherical sensor indicate scene illuminance Exposure meter calibration is discussed in detail in the Light meter article See also editAPEX system Exposure compensation Exposure meter calibration High dynamic range imagingNotes edit In optics the term stop properly refers to the aperture itself while the term step refers to a division of the exposure scale Some authors e g Davis 1999 13 prefer the term stop because they refer to steps e g on a step tablet that are other than powers of 2 ISO standards generally use step while photographers normally use stop a b c In a mathematical expression involving physical quantities it is common practice to require that the argument to a transcendental function such as the logarithm be dimensionless The definition of EV ignores the units in the denominator and uses only the numerical value of the exposure time in seconds EV is not the expression of a physical law but simply a number for encoding combinations of camera settings Symbols for the quantities in the exposure equation have varied over time the symbols used in this article reflect current practice for many authors such as Ray 2000 Appendix C of ANSI PH3 49 1971 noted this possibility when the background luminance within the field is radically different from the subject luminance and further stated In this kind of scene a meter reading of the integrated luminance Ba of the whole scene may not lead to the best picture Exposure values in Table 2 are taken from ANSI exposure guides PH2 7 1973 and PH2 7 1986 where the two guides differ ranges of values have been given or extended The ANSI guides were derived from studies by Loyd A Jones and H R Condit described in Jones and Condit 1941 Jones and Condit 1948 and Jones and Condit 1949 See exposure parameters at pictures in subcategories of 21st century lunar eclipses in Commons Exposure at dpreview com Archived November 12 2013 at the Wayback Machine Specifications for Sekonic light meters are available on the Sekonic web site under Products The metering range for an incident light meter specified in EV at ISO 100 usually applies to a hemispherical sensor so strictly speaking it does not directly relate to illuminance References editAdams Ansel 1981 The Negative Boston New York Graphic Society ISBN 0 8212 1131 5 ANSI PH2 7 1973 American National Standard Photographic Exposure Guide New York American National Standards Institute Superseded by ANSI PH2 7 1986 ANSI PH2 7 1986 American National Standard for Photography Photographic Exposure Guide New York American National Standards Institute ASA PH2 5 1960 American Standard Method for Determining Speed of photographic Negative Materials Monochrome Continuous Tone New York United States of America Standards Institute ASA PH2 15 1964 R1976 American Standard Automatic Exposure Controls for Cameras New York United States of America Standards Institute Camera and Imaging Products Association 2016 Exchangeable image file format for digital still cameras Exif Version 2 31 Archived 2019 07 12 at the Wayback Machine PDF Canon n d Camera settings Shooting modes Archived 2013 05 27 at the Wayback Machine Canon Professional Network Retrieved 5 December 2016 CIPA See Camera and Imaging Products Association Davis Phil 1999 Beyond the Zone System Archived 2007 03 10 at the Wayback Machine 4th ed Boston Focal Press ISBN 0 240 80343 4 Desfor Irving 1957 F Stops On Cameras Discarded Pick Number From 4 To 18 Arizona Republic September 1 Gebele Kurt 1958 Photographic Shutter US Patent 2 829 574 filed 2 November 1953 and issued 8 April 1958 Jones Loyd A and H R Condit 1941 The Brightness Scale of Exterior Scenes and the Computation of Correct Photographic Exposure Journal of the Optical Society of America 31 11 Nov 1941 651 678 Jones Loyd A and H R Condit 1948 Sunlight and skylight as determinants of Photographic exposure I Luminous density as determined by solar altitude and atmospheric conditions Journal of the Optical Society of America 38 2 Feb 1948 123 178 Jones Loyd A and H R Condit 1949 Sunlight and skylight as determinants of Photographic exposure II Scene structure directional index photographic efficiency of daylight safety factors and evaluation of camera exposure Journal of the Optical Society of America 39 2 Feb 1949 94 135 Ray Sidney F 2000 Camera Exposure Determination In The Manual of Photography Photographic and Digital Imaging 9th ed Ed Ralph E Jacobson Sidney F Ray Geoffrey G Atteridge and Norman R Axford Oxford Focal Press ISBN 0 240 51574 9 Ray Sidney F 2002 Applied Photographic Optics 3rd ed Oxford Focal Press ISBN 0 240 51540 4 Ulffers D 1968 Sensitivity Specifications of Exposure Meters British Journal of Photography 115 47 Further reading editEastman Kodak Company Existing Light Photography 3rd ed Rochester NY Silver Pixel Press 1996 ISBN 0 87985 744 7External links editDoug Kerr Setting Camera Exposure in Terms of Ev PDF Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Exposure value amp oldid 1220454830, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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