I have a question about depth of field. DoF is something I want lots of (bokeh is not for me) and it will be a major consideration in choosing a new camera. I read the CiC tutorial on Digital Camera Sensor Sizes, which stated at one point that “if depth of field is the limiting factor, the required exposure time increases with sensor size for the same sensitivity”. I wasn’t able to follow the reasoning.
In the part of the tutorial I did follow, it is approximately true (except for macro shots) that for equivalent fields of view, to maintain the same depth of field requires an f-number inversely proportional to the sensor width. To use a convenient example, a camera with a 4/3” sensor would need f/8 to get the same depth of field as a camera with a 2/3” sensor at f/4. My purchase-related question is, is this a disadvantage for the larger sensor? According to the quote above, the answer would be yes (presuming I haven’t taken it out of context): to compensate for the smaller aperture, I would need a longer exposure time. This makes some sense, given the exposure equation, in which the luminance is proportional to fn^2/(ISO)(t), where t is the exposure time and fn the f-stop. In fact, I would have to have an exposure four times as long to keep the same ISO sensitivity. But …. if (again to make a simplifying assumption) the two sensors have the same number of pixels, the pixel on the 4/3” sensor is 4x as large as that on the 2/3” sensor, so the luminance should be 4x as great, exactly canceling the effect of doubling the f-number. It should be a wash. I should be able to get the same shots, with the same depth of field and the same shutter speed, on the larger sensor camera by reducing the aperture, with no sensitivity penalty. In fact, since the larger sensor will probably have better high-ISO performance, it would have an even better compromise between low light and DoF.
Or would it? Did I goof in my calculation? Or my assumptions? I’m very new to this and it doesn’t make sense that I would catch something the CiC tutorial writers hadn’t.