Google removes Astrophotography support from Pixel 5 and Pixel 4a 5G's ultra wide camera

Peter, 29 December 2020

Google dropped the tele camera of the 4th generation and put an ultra wide camera on the Pixel 5 and Pixel 4a 5G instead. Some users were excited to use the Astrophotography mode with the wider field of view offered by the new camera, however, they were disappointed with the results as images came out noisy and with a very noticeable tint.

Good news – Google fixed the issue. Bad news – the fix just removed the Astrophotography option for the ultra wide camera. This change appears to have arrived with version 8.1 of the Google Camera app.

Pixel 5 Astrophotography photos: main camera (image credit: Jesse Jordan) Pixel 5 Astrophotography photos: ultra wide (image credit: Jesse Jordan) Pixel 5 Astrophotography photos: main camera (image credit: Harvey Etheridge) Pixel 5 Astrophotography photos: ultra wide (image credit: Harvey Etheridge)
Pixel 5 Astrophotography photos: main camera vs. ultra wide

The main camera can still capture impressive-looking photos of the Milky Way, but that is probably not the answer people were hoping for when they first reported the issue in the Google Support forum.

Google has updated the Night Sight page with the following message:

Important: On Pixel 4a (5G) and Pixel 5, astrophotography only works on zoom settings equal to or greater than 1x.

It seems that the 16 MP ultra wide camera used on both Pixels is just not up to the task of capturing multiple long exposures that are required for processing an astrophotography shot. Maybe the Google team will come up with new and improved processing and re-enable the ultra wide cam or maybe they'll just sweep the issue under the rug and move on.

Source | Via


Related

Reader comments

  • dcmille290
  • 04 Feb 2021
  • rU3

I could have sworn the other night while shooting photos of the Milky Way, the camera switched from Night Site to Astralphotography not Astrophotography. Maybe it was just me.? David

  • Anonymous
  • 04 Jan 2021
  • gBV

? As I said I already took the hardware difference into account. The ultra wide angle camera captures more(!) light per frame than the Pixel 3a due to the much longer exposure time, unless the lens suffers from a lot of vignetting.

I saw the entire video, and you're right. It makes the whole experience "easier" as you said... but that's certainly not 'better', and certainly not in terms of quality. Most gcam advantages mentioned can apply to DSLR...

Popular articles

More

Popular devices

Electric Vehicles

More