John Sheehy
Forum Pro
Not exactly. What is true is that if you do need significant DOF, then a small sensor is not an impediment to SNR, but this is only true above base ISO, when you need a specific shutter speed. On a tripod with a static scene, you can give each sensor a standard base-ISO exposure, and the larger the sensor, the more total light is detected. If your subject is still and the camera is still, however, you can take as many images as you want and add them together, for minimal noise and maximum sharpening potential.I was watching a video course on the foundations of Photography, and course material says that a smaller sensor camera is better suited to landscapes because it has a broader depth of field vs. a larger (i.e. Full Frame) sensor. Is this true?
Not really. Many FF lenses stop down pretty far, providing as much DOF or more than some smaller-sensor formats that have limited ability to stop the lenses down. You have to look at the available maximum f-numbers and the focal lengths and do the math, to see the potential DOF. If two systems have the same field of view, then the smaller the entrance pupil, the more DOF there is, and the larger the pupil, the less DOF there is. You get the pupil by dividing the true focal length (not the equivalent one) by the f-number. So if you use 24mm on FF, and 12mm on m43, the m43 will only give more DOF if the f-number is greater than half that used on the FF. IF the m43 lens stops at f/16, and the FF at f/32, then they have the same maximum DOF. If the FF stops at f/22, then the m43 will have more maximum DOF. No matter how many ways you try to look at things, it is the entrance pupil that is actually at the core of all non-time-related photographic characteristics.It seems to me that full frame cameras are used quite a lot in landscape photography as well. Does it become difficult to get a broader depth of field (that is, no blurriness in the photo) with a full frame camera under certain conditions, or does this assertion have no basis in reality?
What is absolutely true is that for the smaller sensors, there are no lenses that can give as shallow a DOF as larger sensors can, with available lenses. Lenses "faster" than f/1.4 are rare, faster than f/0.9 virtually non-existent.
Smaller sensors are an obstacle, when you want the shallowest DOF at wide and medium angles of view, but that does not make them superior at deep DOF; that is limited only by how small lens manufacturers are willing to go, with entrance pupils.

