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Something that often confuses novice photographers is the fact that wide apertures have small f-numbers and small
apertures have larger ones.
It’s something you quickly get used to, but why exactly is this the case? And why do apertures run in seemingly random
steps?
If we first examine the role of the ‘f/‘ before the number itself, we can begin to chip away at the answers to these questions.
So, knowing that 'f' stands for focal length, and assuming the lens in question is a 50mm lens with a maximum aperture of
f/2, what happens if we plug those figures into that equation?
50/2=25
We get 25. And that, in millimetres, is the diameter of the physical opening in the lens through which light passes, otherwise
known as an entrance pupil.
If the focal length divided by the aperture gives us the diameter of the entrance pupil, then the focal length divided by the
diameter of the entrance pupil will give us the aperture. Or, to give it its correct term, the ‘relative’ aperture.
Now, if we just increase the diameter of this entrance pupil by a factor of two, we won't end up with twice as much light
coming through than before. And similarly, if we halve it, we won't end up with half as much either.
In this particular lens, a diameter of 17.8mm will result in twice as much light coming through as a diameter of 12.5mm.
Similarly, a diameter of 8.9mm will result in half of this – and plugging these figures into that first equation is why we end up
with these number like f/2.8 and f/5.6.
50/25=2
50/17.8=2.8
50/12.5=4
50/8.9mm=5.6
This explains why an f/1 aperture isn’t twice as wide as f/2, or four times as wide as f/4, eight times as wide as f/8 and so on.
It also should now make clear why a high f-number corresponds with small aperture, and a low f-number corresponds with a
wide aperture.
That same 50mm lens set to f/22, for example, only has an entrance pupil diameter of around 2.27mm – far smaller than the
25mm measured at f/2.
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