Canon's
large-area CMOS (complementary metal oxide semiconductor) sensor
captures images with exceptional clarity and tonal range, and offers
the most pixels in its class. This APS-C size sensor (22.5 x 15.0mm)
has the same 3:2 ratio as film cameras, enabling an effective angle of
view that is 1.6x the normal EF Lens focal length. 14-bit A/D
conversion means fine transitions from light to dark tones, and a
significant drop in digital and shadow noise. The EOS 40D has an
extensive ISO range (from 100 to 1600, plus ISO 3200* in extended mode)
which is selectable in 1/3 stop increments. The EOS 40D's CMOS sensor
uses much of the new technology first seen in the EOS-1D Mark III
camera. New manufacturing techniques mean each pixel is more sensitive
to light, and less area between pixels is wasted on the sensor. The
on-chip noise reduction electronics are also entirely new, and combine
with the sensor's general design for less digital noise and better
high-ISO performance than ever before. This results in larger, clearer,
sharper and more detailed photographs right from the start.