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7. The Rule Of Five Hundred (HD 2027)
Many modern photographers now use a "Rule of 400" or the more precise NPF Rule because high-megapixel sensors are more sensitive to tiny amounts of movement, making the Rule of 500 too "liberal" (resulting in slight blur). 3. Cultural Context: "1923" Episode 7
The Rule of 500 is a formula used by photographers to calculate the (shutter speed) for capturing sharp, pinpoint stars without visible "star trails" caused by the Earth's rotation. The Formula: 7. The Rule of Five Hundred
Shutter Speed (seconds)=500Focal Length of the LensShutter Speed (seconds) equals the fraction with numerator 500 and denominator Focal Length of the Lens end-fraction Many modern photographers now use a "Rule of
It identifies the threshold where the movement of stars across the sky begins to blur into streaks rather than appearing as distinct dots in a long-exposure image. 2. Application and Adjustments The Formula: Shutter Speed (seconds)=500Focal Length of the
For cameras with APS-C sensors (like most entry-level DSLRs), you must first multiply the lens focal length by the camera's "crop factor" (usually 1.5x or 1.6x) before dividing.