Digital cameras use an electronic image sensor primarily based on light-sensitive electronics similar to charge-coupled system or complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor technology. The ensuing digital image is stored electronically, however can be reproduced on a paper. The camera is the image-forming system, and a photographic plate, photographic film or a silicon electronic image sensor is the capture medium. The respective recording medium could be the plate or film itself, or a digital magnetic or electronic memory. In 1991, Kodak unveiled the DCS a hundred, the first commercially obtainable digital single-lens reflex digital camera.
This is a camera setting if the solar is …