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zooms

Zooms refer to the ability to change the focal length of a camera lens, thereby altering the magnification and field of view without moving the camera. In common usage, “zoom” describes either optical zoom produced by a zoom lens or digital zoom created by image processing. Optical zoom preserves image resolution because it re-frames the scene with lens elements, while digital zoom crops and enlarges the image, which reduces sharpness and detail.

A zoom lens contains groups of glass elements that extend or contract relative to one another as

Focus behavior varies: parfocal zooms tend to maintain focus during zooming, while many everyday zooms are

Applications include photography of landscapes, events, wildlife, and cinema; zooms enable versatile framing and a single

the
user
turns
the
zoom
ring
or
activates
a
motor.
The
zoom
ratio
is
the
ratio
of
the
longest
focal
length
to
the
shortest.
Lenses
are
categorized
by
their
focal-length
range,
such
as
standard
zooms
(roughly
24–70
mm),
wide-angle
zooms
(16–35
mm),
and
telephoto
zooms
(70–200
mm).
Some
designs
offer
a
constant
maximum
aperture
across
the
range;
others
vary,
becoming
slower
at
longer
focal
lengths.
not
perfectly
parfocal
and
require
refocusing
when
zooming.
Image
stabilization
and
coatings
affect
performance
across
the
range.
In
video
work,
zooms
are
often
motorized
to
provide
smooth,
controlled
changes
in
focal
length
with
minimal
operator
input.
lens
to
cover
multiple
focal
lengths.
Limitations
include
potential
drops
in
sharpness,
color,
and
contrast
toward
the
extremes
of
the
range,
increased
size
and
weight,
and
higher
cost
relative
to
prime
lenses.
Digital
zoom
should
be
avoided
for
quality
unless
cropping
is
impractical.