A megapixel (MP or Mpx) is one million pixels, and is a term used not
only for the number of pixels in an image, but to express the number of
image sensor elements of digital cameras or the number of display elements of digital displays.
For example, a camera with an array of 2048 × 1536 sensor elements is
commonly said to have "3.1 megapixels" (2048 × 1536 = 3,145,728).
Digital cameras use photosensitive electronics, either charge-coupled device (CCD) or complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor (CMOS) image sensors,
consisting of a large number of single sensor elements, each of which
records a measured intensity level. In most digital cameras, the sensor
array is covered with a patterned color filter mosaic having red, green,
and blue regions in the Bayer filter
arrangement, so that each sensor element can record the intensity of a
single primary color of light. The camera interpolates the color
information of neighboring sensor elements, through a process called demosaicing,
to create the final image. These sensor elements are often called
"pixels", even though they only record 1 channel (only red, or green, or
blue) of the final color image. Thus, two of the three color channels
for each sensor must be interpolated and a so-called N-megapixel
camera that produces an N-megapixel image provides only one-third of the
information that an image of the same size could get from a scanner.
Thus, certain color contrasts may look fuzzier than others, depending on
the allocation of the primary colors (green has twice as many elements
as red or blue in the Bayer arrangement).
#http://en.wikipedia.org
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