Difference between revisions of "Diaphragm"

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|image_text= an 8-bladed iris diaphragm
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A '''diaphragm''' (or '''iris''' or ''iris diaphragm'') is a mechanism in a camera that makes a variable [[aperture]] to control the intensity of light that passes through the lens. Along with [[shutter speed]], this is what controls the exposure received by the film or image sensor.
 
A '''diaphragm''' (or '''iris''' or ''iris diaphragm'') is a mechanism in a camera that makes a variable [[aperture]] to control the intensity of light that passes through the lens. Along with [[shutter speed]], this is what controls the exposure received by the film or image sensor.

Revision as of 21:49, 7 January 2012

Glossary Terms

A diaphragm (or iris or iris diaphragm) is a mechanism in a camera that makes a variable aperture to control the intensity of light that passes through the lens. Along with shutter speed, this is what controls the exposure received by the film or image sensor.

A diaphragm may take many forms, from very simple devices for "point-and-shoot" film cameras consisting of just two notched pieces of metal, to more complex ones used in higher-quality cameras which have many blades arranged in a circle. This arrangement, also called an "iris" after the corresponding structure in the eye, creates a nearly-circular aperture whose size can be varied as needed. There may be as few as 5 blades to as many as 19. In cameras with a small number of diaphragm blades, the shape of the aperture itself (e.g. a hexagon) can often be seen in defocused points of light.

To transmit a particular light intensity, the physical diameter of the aperture must scale up with increasing lens focal length. Thus, apertures are expressed by the f-stop scale or "F-ratio," which is the focal length divided by the entrance pupil diameter provided by the diaphragm opening.

Common Diaphragm Types

These are listed in historical order from oldest to newest.

  • Waterhouse Stops - An aperture of a specific size is cut in a metal plate. To change the aperture size, the plate must be removed and replaced with a plate having a different sized aperture hole.
  • Manual - A multi-bladed iris with an aperture that can be adjusted by some type of control on the outside of the lens or camera. The size adjustment may be continuous (so the user must rely on markings to position the control at a specific aperture) or provide detents at particular f/stop values.
  • Preset - An improvement on the manual diaphragm, adding a second control ring with detents or preset locking points corresponding to the selected aperture. The photographer can focus and compose with the iris fully open for the brightest image; then (without looking) quickly close down to the chosen f/stop just before exposure.
  • Automatic - An improvement on the preset diaphragm, which also allows focusing and composing at the maximum aperture; but stopping down to the selected shooting aperture happens automatically. Early lenses accomplished this with a pressure actuated plunger alongside the lens barrel, which aligned with the shutter release on the camera body. In the 1950s manufacturers began including an aperture linkage internal to the lens mount, for example in the Praktina or the Minolta SR-2. The clear advantages of this method have made it the standard for lenses ever since (except in situations, for example with bellows or tilt/shift lenses, where the required linkage would be difficult to engineer).