Pearson Solutions
Close windowBack to Pearson
Encyclopedia

camera

camera, lightproof box or container, usually fitted with a lens, which gathers incoming light and concentrates it so that it can be directed toward the film (in an optical camera) or the imaging device (in a digital camera) contained within. Today there are many different types of camera in use, all of them more or less sophisticated versions of the camera obscura, which dates back to antiquity. Nearly all of them are made up of the same basic parts: a body (the lightproof box), a lens and a shutter to control the amount of light reaching the light-sensitive surface, a viewfinder to frame the scene, and a focusing mechanism.

The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2007, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.

More on camera from Fact Monster:

  • CAMERAS - A camera is a device that records pictures. It consists of a sealed box that catches the light rays given off by a source. A lens at the front of the
  • camera: Still Cameras - Still Cameras Focusing and Composing the Scene Except for pinhole cameras, which focus the image on ...
  • camera: Motion Picture Cameras - Motion Picture Cameras The motion picture camera comes in a variety of sizes, from 8 mm to 35 mm ...
  • camera: Development of the Camera - Development of the Camera The original concept of the camera dates from Grecian times, when ...
  • camera: Bibliography - Bibliography See The Encyclopedia of Photography (1971); The Focal Encyclopedia of Photography ...

See more Encyclopedia articles on: Technology: Terms and Concepts

© 2000–2008 Pearson Education, publishing as Fact Monster