cancel
Showing results for 
Show  only  | Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Does a longer exposure result in a larger file size?

stevet1
Authority
Authority

I was just curious.

If I take a 30 second exposure, and an exposure of 1/200th's of a second, is the 30 second exposure a larger file size; i.e. more bytes?

Steve Thomas

4 REPLIES 4

kvbarkley
VIP
VIP

For Raw files, no.

For jpegs, the more noise the larger the file. So assuming that the 30 second exposure does not just blow out the whole image leaving it totally white, a longer exposure can result in a larger file.

During an idle moment, I actually looked at the number of files remaining as a function of ISO, and larger ISO's resulted in fewer files.

For my T6S:

Untitled.jpg

I am not sure what card brand has to do with it, though. 8^)

“ I am not sure what card brand has to do with it, though. 8^)

It may have more to do with burst rates than files sizes.  =8^0

--------------------------------------------------------
"The right mouse button is your friend."

kvbarkley
VIP
VIP

Putting my nerd hat on, it has to do with information theory. Random data is not compressible, so the more noise in the data, it is harder to reduce the file size. In fact, the compressed size may *increase* with very random data.

Text is easy to compress because it is pretty predictable, with lots of redundant info in the coding method.

JPEG (and MP3) work by throwing away information you can't perceive anyway.

In fact, it is not as common as it used to be, but occasionally you hear about people claiming to have invented a miraculous lossless compression method that works on all files, and can be "run on itself" to get even smaller files. This is snake oil.

https://www.computerworld.com/article/2793144/experts-question-compression--breakthrough-.html

http://rationalnumbers.james-kay.com/?p=1656

 

Peter
Authority
Authority

More heat, more noise, larger file size. Easy to try.

Avatar
Announcements