Broad lighting has nothing to do with digital cameras, per se; it's a studio lighting term that indicates position of the light source and how an image is illuminated. In broad lighting, the side of the person or object facing the camera gets most of the light. This tends to be unflattering for portrait Photography because there are fewer shadows, which makes a person look heavier.
Digital camera
Electric Light Bulb
light
It focuses the light entering the camera onto the sensor.
The Color of Canon SD890 Digital camera is light blue, pale blue.
Any film camera with a light meter, and every digital camera, has a sensor that will do that.
yes
Traditional Photography records light from a camera on to film, digital records the light on to a light sensitive digital CCD that transferrs the image into data and records it as a digital file.
Steven J. Sasson (b. 1950) is an electrical engineer and the inventor of the digital camera. His invention began in 1975 with a very broad assignment from his supervisor at Eastman Kodak Company. He was fidling around with bits and peices of equipment and it came together to make the digital camera.
Digital camera sensors work by converting light into electrical signals. When light enters the camera through the lens, it hits the sensor, which is made up of millions of tiny light-sensitive pixels. Each pixel measures the intensity of light it receives and converts it into an electrical signal. These signals are then processed by the camera's image processor to create a digital image.
When you click the camera the shutter behind the lens of the camera opens briefly and lets in the light on to the film. I am no specialist and this is what I learnt in school.
The CCD is the part of the camera that changes the light that enters the camera into a digital signal that is then saved on the memory card. You can think of it as where the film would be in a regular 35mm film camera.