BackdoorArts
Senior Member
That's what magnified means; increase the apparent size. That the original is identical is irrelevant, when compiled as a RAW file, my D3300 shot is magnified relative to my D750 shot since the smaller sensor has as many pixels.
If two would be taking the same shot with a DX and FX using the same lens, all sizes remain identical up to the sensor. If we could see the image projected on the sensor, both their sizes would be identical. Sizes meaning dimension to be clear. A real world meter is as large on my DX sensor as it is on my FX sensor if shooting the same lens at the same distance. That there's "more" shot is besides the point here. But once beyond the sensor, they become relative in size and the LCD on the one cam will show a bigger subject than the other.
That IS magnification.
It's not that different from what a zoom lens does compared to a prime. For both too the subject is identical in size and only by repositioning the one glass in relation to the other, we magnify. We don't magnify the subject, we magnify the image projected on the sensor. Mpix and sensor size fundamentally don't behave differently; the one in relation to the other defines the image projected.
I rest my case. Even when you're wrong you want to be right.
We don't magnify the subject, we magnify the image projected on the sensor.
Pardon me, but this is absolutely, 100%, undeniably incorrect. The image projected does not change!!! And if it doesn't change then it cannot be magnified, it can not be stupified, deep fried or anything else. Holy crap!!!
It is interpreted at a higher resolution, but that IS NOTmagnification, that is math. A D810 has a 36MP sensor which is the exact same size as the D750's 24MP sensor. The resulting image is of a higher resolution, meaning that the resulting image file is of greater overall dimension, but it's not "magnified". But wait, it's bigger, so it has to be, right?! Wrong!! You want to stick a word in there that is technically correct then use "enlarged", because that's what happens. The exact same projected optical source image is interpreted by different pixel densities and output at different sizes. That is enlargement not magnification.