F6.8 equivalent also puts the iPhone 13 Pro's main camera only roughly 2.5 EV short of the light gathering capability of a full-frame camera with an F2.8 lens attached, assuming parity in sensor efficiency, microlens design and light gathering ability, etc. That makes the sensor and lens combination F6.8 equivalent (read our article on equivalence), so you can achieve some background blur and subject separation optically, without of Portrait Mode. The larger sensors, bigger entrance pupils, and faster apertures mean a significantly bigger camera module on this year's 13 Pro ( right) compared to last year's 12 Pro ( left). The lens has been upgraded from an F1.6 to a wider F1.5 aperture, bringing in 14% more light. The 1.9µm pixel pitch of the 13 Pro and Pro Max 1/1.65"-type * main camera sensor allows it to achieve a 44mm 2 surface area, which gathers 84% more light than last year's 1/2.55"-type sensor in the 12 Pro, and 25% more light than the 1/1.9"-type sensor in last year's 12 Pro Max and this year's 13 and 13 Mini models. Let's take a closer look at the main 'wide' camera, and how it compares to last year's iPhone 12 Pro and 12 Pro Max models: Wide (main) cameras:
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