>>1151201Pretty much all DSLR and mirrorless do. Bridge and point&shoot may or may not, just check their specs.
>clarity/blurIf the subject is within the DOF then the things that blur it will be motion. Either the camera moves of the subject moves. Adjusting the exposure so it is faster and/or tracking the subject will help prevent blur. Check the stuff in
>>1151083>megapixels (MP)Check the size of the sensor. If the sensors of 2 cameras are the same size, but one is 10MP and the other 20MP it means the one with 10MP will have larger pixels on the sensor. The 20MP sensor will have smaller pixels on the sensor. MP is basically just the amount of pixels packed into the image. However, sensor size to MP ratio is different in respect to dynamic range. Uh, you know, this is going to get complicated. Here:
http://www.clarkvision.com/articles/does.pixel.size.matter/#sensorconstanthttp://www.techradar.com/news/the-a-to-z-of-photography-dynamic-rangePersonally, I use a D3400 that has 24.2MP, 4000x6000 pixel images. I got something with large megapixels, but not a full frame camera because I don't have that kind of money. I'd rather have a full frame camera and lenses.
Basically, digital cameras have light limitations. The sensor can only go so far up and down the spectrum from dark to light. The amount of stops in between are what are counted. Digital has 16 stops at most while the human eye can see up to 20 stops. Read the rest on:
http://www.clarkvision.com/articles/does.pixel.size.matterTo make up for this, some people do "high dynamic range" (HDR) in post processing. They take several photos using a tripod of the same scene. Each photo has a different exposure going from light to dark. Then they combine all the photos into 1 photos which has all that light information. Here's an example I did in /p/. 15 photos to make 1 photo. I did it handheld instead of a tripod so there's some ghosting issues.