What is the image sensor?

The image sensor is the part of the camera that gathers light to form images. On Canon mirrorless cameras, this sensor is either of two sizes (formats): full-frame or APS-C format.
The size difference between APS-C and full-frame image sensors

Full-frame sensor: approx. 36 x 24mm
APS-C sensor: approx. 22.3 x 14.9mm
For more details on how the image sensor format affects your images, see Full-Frame vs APS-C Camera: Which Should I Choose?
How does this affect the lens?
Light entering the lens projects a circular image onto the image sensor. We call this the “image circle”. As an APS-C sensor is smaller than a full-frame sensor, the image circle cast by an RF-S lens does not need to be as big to cover the whole sensor compared to an RF lens.

This means smaller-diameter glass can be used to build the lens, enabling smaller, lighter lens bodies.
How does this affect my photos?
The 1.6x APS-C crop

At any given lens focal length, the smaller APS-C image sensor records a narrower part of the scene than a full-frame image sensor. This makes the resulting image look more “zoomed in” or “cropped”.
On Canon APS-C cameras, this zoomed-in image’s angle-of-view is the same as an image shot at 1.6x the focal length on a full-frame camera. It’s known as the “1.6x crop effect”, and also applies to images shot with RF-S lenses on full-frame cameras like the EOS R8.
Let’s take a look at what happens with different camera-lens combinations.
- APS-C EOS R series camera (EOS R100, R50, R10, R7, etc.)
- Full-frame EOS R series camera (EOS R8, RP, R6 Mark II, R5, R3, etc.)
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