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A sensor size utilised in the early days of digital cameras was called APS-H. The typical sensor size for this size is 27.9 x 18.6mm, or roughly 70% of a full frame sensor’s (36 x 24mm) size. The APS (Advanced Photo System) film format, which was short-lived, supported three different frame sizes, including APS-H.
The APS-H sensor format is smaller than a conventional full-frame sensor but somewhat larger than the APS-C sensor type that many DSLR cameras use today.
The Global APS-H CMOS image sensor market accounted for $XX Billion in 2022 and is anticipated to reach $XX Billion by 2030, registering a CAGR of XX% from 2023 to 2030.
New 19K 250 MP APS-H CMOS Sensor from Canon Recent months have seen Canon release new sensors like cupcakes. This time, a 250 MP APS-H CMOS with an ultra-high resolution is unveiled.
The LI8020SAC (colour) and LI8020SAM (monochrome) APS-H size (about 29.4 x 18.9 mm) CMOS sensors are described here. In late October of this year, a sensor with a resolution of 19,568 by 12,588 pixels and a capacity of 250 million pixels will be made available.
The new sensor can be used for a variety of shooting ranges and applications since it can image at an ultra-high resolution of roughly 250 million pixels. As the number of pixels on CMOS sensors rises, the volume of signal also rises, creating issues including timing issues and signal latency.
But according to Canon, the new sensor delivers an astonishingly high pixel count of over 250 million and incorporates miniaturised circuitry and improved signal processing technologies to provide an extremely high pixel readout speed of about 1,250 megapixels per second.
In spite of full pixel readout, this enables the sensors to collect ultra-high resolution images at up to 5 frames per second (FPS).
According to Canon, the new sensor’s ultra-high resolution of 250 megapixels (19,568 x 12,588) is about 125 times greater than that of full HD (1920 x 1080 pixels) and about 30 times greater than that of 4K (3840 x 2160 pixels). The sensor is available in colour and monochrome versions, the LI8020SAC and LI8020SAM.