X-Nico

3 unusual facts about field of view


Field of View

One of their hit singles, Dan Dan Kokoro Hikareteku, was used as the opening theme for the popular anime series Dragon Ball GT.

Field of view

In astronomy the field of view is usually expressed as an angular area viewed by the instrument, in square degrees, or for higher magnification instruments, in square arc-minutes.

Virtual tour

This is because there is sophisticated math and camera-lens profiles that are needed to create the desired panorama image which is based on your camera's depth of field (FOV) and the type of lens you used.


Canon EF 28–300mm lens

When used on a digital EOS body with a field of view compensation factor of 1.3x, such as the Canon EOS-1D Mark III, it provides a narrow field of view, equivalent to a 36–390mm lens mounted on a 35mm frame body.

Canon EF 300mm lens

When used on a digital EOS body with a field of view compensation factor of 1.3x, such as the Canon EOS-1D Mark IV, it provides a narrow field of view, equivalent to a 390 mm lens mounted on a 35mm frame body.

Canon EF 35–350mm lens

When used on a digital EOS body with a field of view compensation factor of 1.6x, such as the Canon EOS 7D, it provides a narrow field of view, equivalent to a 56–560mm lens mounted on a 35mm frame body.

Dragon Ball: Saikyō e no Michi Original Soundtrack

The album also includes a cinematic version of the GT opening theme song "Dan Dan Kokoro Hikareteku" by the band Field of View.


see also

Akihito Tokunaga

He also composed and/or arranged for the following musicians, such as MANISH, FIELD OF VIEW, TUBE, Keiko Utoku, KAT-TUN, Miho Komatsu, Uka Saegusa, T-BOLAN, DEEN, MISIA, Shinichi Mori, TWINZER, Kaori Nanao, Barbier, Fayray, Aika Ohno, and many other musicians.

Albert Bouwers

The design has an ultra wide field of view with no spherical aberration but does not correct chromatic aberration and was only suitable as a monochromatic astronomical astrographic camera working at a single wavelength of light.

SkyMapper

The telescope has a compact modified Cassegrain design with a large 0.69 m secondary mirror, which gives it a very wide field of view: its single, dedicated instrument, a 268-million pixel imaging camera, can photograph 5.7 square degrees of sky.

Wide Field and Planetary Camera

This first WFPC consisted of two separate cameras, each comprising 4 800x800 pixel Texas Instruments CCDs arranged to cover a contiguous field of view.