Originally Posted by
Snarkbyte
Hi Peter,
The difference is due to the size of the pixel elements on the different sensors... if the FF and crop-sensor bodies had sensors with the pixel elements of exactly the same dimensions, there would be no difference in DoF (assuming everything else, such as focal length, aperture, and range to target are the same). The size of the pixel determines maximum sharpness of the image (assuming a "perfect" lens), so a sensor with a smaller pixel size will show loss-of-sharpness sooner than a sensor with a larger pixel size. In other words, greater pixel density (smaller pixels) means shallower DoF (in theory, anyway), because the limit of maximum sharpness is smaller. The difference is really in the way we define "acceptable sharpness"... if "acceptable sharpness" is determined by the size of the pixel element, then the limits of acceptable sharpness are smaller for the sensor with higher pixel density. In general, FF sensors have larger pixel elements (which is good for low-light capability), and crop-sensor bodies have higher pixel DENSITY (which is good for sharpness). Make sense?