Nikon D5000 Live view
The Nikon D5000 brings Live view to Nikon's consumer DSLR line for the first time (unless you consider the D90 a consumer model; we class the D90 as a prosumer or enthusiast model).
One welcome enhancement carried over from the D90 to the Nikon D5000 is its one-touch activation, via the Live view button. On the D300, Live view mode had to be selected via the Drive Mode wheel on the left side of the camera's top panel; a somewhat cumbersome arrangement. By contrast, the Nikon D5000 sports a LV button on its rear panel, in very convenient reach of your thumb. Press it at any time and the mirror flips up and the camera immediately enters Live view mode. A nice feature, it does a lot to make Live view a much more fluid part of your photography than it's been in the past.
Live view Mode Displays
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Shooting mode
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Focus point (face detect in this case)
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"No movie" icon
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Audio recording indicator
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Time remaining (live view mode)
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Time remaining (move mode)
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Live view autofocus mode
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Like the D90, the Nikon D5000 has only one type of autofocus method in Live view, and it's not the traditional phase-detect AF. The D5000's only option for autofocus in Live view mode is contrast detection. This is a fairly radical departure compared to other camera makers.
Contrast-detect vs. Phase-detect Autofocus
By way of explanation, the phase-detect/contrast-detect distinction is one of the fundamental differences that separates digicams from digital SLRs, and is the core reason that SLRs focus more quickly. Contrast-detection autofocus involves looking at the image from a camera's main image sensor and evaluating it to see how abruptly brightness values change from one pixel to the next. If an image is soft and fuzzy, brightness changes between adjacent pixels will be relatively slight, but if it's sharply focused, they'll be much greater. The point of ideal focus is found by moving the lens elements back and forth and determining whether the contrast signal gets stronger or weaker. Achieving focus this way necessarily involves some back-and-forth hunting, which can take a while to accomplish. By contrast (no pun intended), phase-detect AF uses a system of prisms, lenses, and a secondary sensor to determine not only whether the image is in focus or not, but by how much it's out of focus and in which direction. The camera can then adjust the focus setting to exactly the position needed in a single step. As a result, phase-detect AF systems are generally much faster than contrast-detect ones.
The catch with phase-detect AF though, is that it requires some of the light passing through the lens to be diverted to the focus sensor. This is fine in an SLR when the mirror is down between exposures, as part of the mirror is typically partially transmissive, with the light passing through it deflected by a secondary mirror down to the AF sensor, usually located in the bottom of the mirror box. When the mirror is raised in Live view mode, though, light from the lens can't get to the separate AF sensor. This accounts for the rather lengthy (and noisy) AF cycles in most Live view SLRs: To focus the camera the mirror has to be dropped, focus determined, and the mirror raised again, adding several tenths of a second to the normal non-Live view shutter lag. For example, the Nikon D5000 has a shutter lag of only 0.276 second when using the optical viewfinder and a single AF point. This increases to an average of 2.30 seconds in Live view mode via contrast-detect, all other settings being the same. While it takes some time for the mirror to drop and re-open for phase-detect AF in Live view mode, the overall result can still be faster than when relying on contrast-detect autofocus. The Nikon D300 for instance can focus and capture a shot in 0.465 second in Live view mode using phase-detect AF.
With the above as background, you can see why we were surprised to find contrast-detect AF the only autofocus option available on the D90, and that they've carried that limitation forward on the Nikon D5000. The Nikon D5000's contrast-detect AF in Live view mode clearly isn't something you're going to be using for sports shooting.
One advantage of contrast-detect autofocus, though, is that you're not restricted to focusing only on those areas where you happen to have an AF point. The Nikon D5000 lets you put the focus box anywhere in the frame when in Live view mode.
Besides the ability to position the AF area wherever you like it, the Nikon D5000's contrast-detect AF in Live view mode also offers face detection. Up to 5 faces can be detected in an image in Face Priority mode, and the AF areas adjust to match the size of each face detected. The face-detect box shows yellow when not in focus, and green when in focus (after half-pressing the shutter button). The video clip at right shows the D90 tracking a live face while zooming in and out and panning around. The Nikon D5000's face detection autofocus mode is identical.
Playing with face-detect autofocus in Live view mode, we were pleased to see that the camera not only tracked the faces, but was also intelligent enough to set focus based on the eyes of subjects, rather than on their noses or mouths. (In portrait work, the eyes are the most critical part of the face to render in sharp focus. Other parts of the face can be soft but viewers will regard the shot as properly focused if the eyes are crisp.)
Other Nikon D5000 Live view autofocus modes are: Wide Area, designed for hand-held shots of landscapes and other non-portrait subjects; Normal Area, designed for pin-point focusing using a tripod; and a new mode called Subject Tracking. This mode is designed to track just about any selected subject as it moves through the frame. It need not have a face.
Manual Focusing in Live view Mode
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