Mega pixels and Mega Bytes (mb) measure two different things.
Megapixels measure resolution and Mega bytes file/capacity size.
Whilst there is a correlation (a larger resolution has more data to hold, so the picture has a greater file size) there are many different picture file formats (hence the different extentions, JPG, PNG, etc.) each of which compress the data differently.
It is therefore impossible to give a direct conversion.
That will vary based on what the image is of, what the file type is, how it's compressed, etc. A typical 1 MB image will be at least 1 megapixel.
the 14mp camera has 1.4 times better quality than the 10mp one
megacycle, megalopolis, megabyte, megastar, megalomania, megapixel, megaplex, megaspore, megawatt
* 2 megapixel camera = 0.9MB1GB = 1024MB1024MB/0.9MB = 1137 Pictures* 3 megapixel camera = 1.2MB1GB = 1024MB1024MB/1.2MB = 853 Pictures* 4 megapixel camera = 2MB1GB = 1024MB1024MB/2MB = 512 Pictures* 5 megapixel camera = 2.5MB1GB = 1024MB1024MB/2.5MB = 410 Pictures* 6 megapixel camera = 3.2MB1GB = 1024MB1024MB/3.2MB = 320 Pictures* 7 megapixel camera = 3.7MB1GB = 1024MB1024MB/3.7MB = 277 Pictures* 8 megapixel camera = 4.2MB1GB = 1024MB1024MB/4.2MB = 244 Pictures
depends on imaging system. they range from 5 to 10 megapixels each. each megapixel requires 1.5 megabytes of storage because of 12 bit grayscale. So... best equipment produces 10 megapixel image requiring 15 megabytes of information to be stored. The images are stored in jpeg2000 format which cuts the size in half using nonlossy compression. So summary it takes up to 7.5 megabytes of space on the hospital hard drive to store one xray.
An average 10 megapixel JPEG* image will be about 4.5MB (megabytes). A 1GB card would be able to hold about 220 of these. hope this helps.
Depends on the resolution and quality settings. Around 300 at highest settings.
We have to remember that: 1) 1 PIXEL=3 BYTES=24 BITS (FROM A COLOUR PERSPECTIVE, SINCE THE NUMBER OF BITS HAVE TO BE MULTIPLIED TIMES 3. THAT IS, 8 TIMES 3 EQUALS 24) 2) 1 MEGAPIXEL=3 MEGABYTES (APROXIMATELY) 3) 170.6 MEGAPIXELS= 512 MEGABYTES 4) THE ANSWER IS... APROXIMATELY 25 IMAGES OF 7 MEGAPIXELS EACH WILL FIT INTO A 512 MEGABYTES MEMORY CARD.
Photos tend to average out at around 1mb per 3 megapixels. So on a 10 megapixel camera, you're looking at about 3.5 megabyte per picture. In short, you'll get around four at your camera's highest quality setting. The short version: Get a bigger card. 1gb+ SD and CF cards are cheap enough that there's no reason to bother with tiny cards like this.
A standard size for a DVD is 4.7GB. A 10 megapixel photo is about 30 megabytes in size. 1 gigabyte = 1024 megabytes. This means that you can fit around 160 of these quality pictures on a DVD. Different cameras take different sizes therefore you may be able to fit a little more or a little less.
There isn't exactly much of a relationship between the megapixel and the megabyte. A megapixel is a million pixels, and a megabyte is a million bytes. If you are talking in terms of a digital camera, its considered standard that a pixel is 3 bytes, one byte for each color (red, green, blue). But, almost all digital cameras output in JPEG format, which compresses the images even further. There is no formula to determine size, because each image can be compressed different amounts.
The proper noun Meg is a short form of the female given name Meghan or Megan. The slang use of the term "meg" was to represent a "megabyte" of data storage, or as a "megapixel" in digital photography.