Aperture Area Calculator
Compute the effective light-collecting area of any circular aperture from diameter or f-number and focal length.
🔭 What is Aperture Area?
Aperture area is the effective cross-sectional area of the circular opening through which light enters an optical instrument such as a telescope, camera lens, binoculars, or microscope. It determines how much light the instrument can collect and is one of the most fundamental specifications in optics. The formula is A = pi times (d/2) squared, where d is the aperture diameter. For a camera lens, the aperture diameter is derived from the focal length f and f-number N as d = f divided by N.
Aperture area matters in a wide range of real applications. In astronomy, a larger aperture telescope collects more photons from faint deep-sky objects, allowing shorter exposure times and revealing dimmer stars. A 400mm reflector telescope has roughly 16 times more collecting area than a 100mm refractor, making it capable of imaging galaxies that are completely invisible through smaller instruments. In photography, a large aperture (small f-number such as f/1.4 or f/1.8) allows shooting in dim conditions without raising ISO noise, and produces shallow depth of field that blurs distracting backgrounds. In scientific instruments such as spectrophotometers, a larger aperture area improves signal-to-noise ratio by increasing the number of photons reaching the detector.
A common misconception is that the f-number alone determines brightness. In fact, for two lenses with the same f-number but different focal lengths, the longer lens has a larger physical aperture diameter (and thus a larger aperture area) but delivers the same image brightness (same f-number = same light per unit sensor area). What changes is the physical entrance pupil size. A 200mm f/2.8 lens has a 71.4mm diameter aperture, while a 50mm f/2.8 lens has only a 17.9mm diameter, yet both deliver the same exposure value per unit area on the sensor.
This calculator handles both common cases: computing area from a known physical diameter (useful for telescopes and custom optical systems), and computing area from focal length and f-number (useful for evaluating camera lenses). It returns results in mm², cm², m², and square inches, plus the derived diameter and radius in metric and imperial units, making it convenient for both metric-system optics work and inch-based telescope aperture specifications.