the F numbers usually refer to the aperture of the lens which controls how much light can enter the camera. it also affects the depth of field.
No. There has never been an F5 tornado recorded in Colorado. It has had a handful of F4 tornadoes.
The functional opening is the aperture, the opening that controls the amount of light that hits the photosensitive surface. You may have a camera with interchangeable lenses that screw into and out of the camera's body. The opening into which the lens is screwed is not the aperture.
It is how high, low or what side the camera is. Read the article link to see what I mean. Hope this helps.
It means that the photos that the camera will take, will have 2 million pixels in one photo.
Assuming you mean to use the camera without glasses, a diopter attachment for the camera eyepiece. Visit a real camera store to inquire and/or check the camera manual to see if the manufacturer lists these as an accessory.
Press f5
The "S" setting on a 35mm camera stands for "shutter priority mode." In this mode, you can manually set the shutter speed while the camera automatically adjusts the aperture for proper exposure.
A document setting on a camaera is for photographing documents. With the correct software these photos can then be reformated and turned in to text documents.
Do you mean if you hold F5 will it continuously work? if so then yes
press F5 repeatedly to cycle through the three camera options.
You press F5 to change the camera view, it goes from first person, behind, and in front.
Auto setting is used for general photography When you are using your camera in ways that YOU do not need to take control Auto setting is best applied
On a PC, you press F5 but I'm not sure about the button you press for Macs
You would need to download mods, or if you mean third person mode, press F5 on your keyboard.
The setting which dictates the amount of light that enters the lens. f-stop...f-1.4
The aperture setting that allows the most light to enter the camera is the widest aperture setting, represented by a lower f-stop number.
The ISO setting may be too high in your camera if your photos appear grainy or noisy. Adjusting the ISO to a lower setting can help improve image quality.