Huawei's P20 Pro smartphone Camera Defined
Huawei's P20 Pro smartphone has three rear-facing cameras
The first smartphone to boast a pair of rear-facing cameras for non-3D photography was the HTC M8 in 2014 It was Apple’s iPhone 7 Plus,
however, that made the double-cam setup standard on flagship phones.
Now, Huawei’s new P20 Pro phone packs a trio of rear-facing cameras, and
things will likely only escalate from here. And while it may sound like
a novelty, multiple imaging devices feed lots of photo and video data
to increasingly powerful processors. This creates computational cameras
with some real advantages over their cyclopean competition.
Here’s what each camera does.
All those pixels can sound a warning signal for some camera nerds like me because cramming lots of pixels onto a small cellphone sensor can increase the chances for problems like digital noise in your photos. However, at 1/1.78 inches, the sensor inside the Huawei phone is roughly twice the size of what you find in other phones, like the 1/2.55 inch chip inside the Samsung Galaxy S9. With a bigger sensor, it can literally catch more light, which typically leads to less noise.
Here’s what each camera does.
Main camera
All those pixels can sound a warning signal for some camera nerds like me because cramming lots of pixels onto a small cellphone sensor can increase the chances for problems like digital noise in your photos. However, at 1/1.78 inches, the sensor inside the Huawei phone is roughly twice the size of what you find in other phones, like the 1/2.55 inch chip inside the Samsung Galaxy S9. With a bigger sensor, it can literally catch more light, which typically leads to less noise.
Telephoto Camera
The lens itself doesn’t let in as much light as the main camera’s lens (it has a maximum aperture of f/2.4 compared to f/1.8 on the wide-angle), but that’s expected and similar to the camera implementation on other phones. The telephoto lens, however, does have optical image stabilization built in, which means the glass elements within the lens move around as your hand shakes to neutralize the blur that would otherwise happen as a result.
Secondary camera
The black-and-white camera looks out into a scene and pulls out specific data the phone can use for computational photography. For instance, it can help estimate how far images are from the front of the lenses, information that the processor can then use to help estimate fake blur that’s typically associated with portrait modes.
The monochrome camera also helps capture finer details because it doesn’t have color filters for determining the hues in an image. As a result, it can add detail to images during digital zoom, which typically involves a substantial loss of image quality.
Camera testing lab DXO Mark calls it the best zoom performance it has ever seen on a smartphone.
The additional detail from the monochrome image also helps push the low-light performance of the camera. According to the DXO test, it can reach a maximum ISO of 102,000+, which is on-par or better than some pro-grade DSLRs. Those pro cameras are reaching those heights with high-end sensors, but it’s impressive for a smartphone camera to even reach that level at all.
Expect to see more of this
Unless smartphones start getting thicker, or new lens tech like liquid lenses starts to become a lot more practical, it wouldn’t be a surprise if the back of your phone continues getting a little more crowded with cameras.
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