Both the iPhone 16 Pro and iPhone 16 Pro Max feature a tetraprism lens system capable of up to 5x optical zoom. That's an improvement over last year's smaller iPhone 15 Pro model, which was limited to 3x zoom.
When shooting with 5x enabled, the iPhone 16 Pro's Telephoto lens opens at ƒ/2.8, allowing for excellent light management, according to Apple. By comparison, the Galaxy S24 Ultra's 10x lens has a ƒ/3.4 aperture. A lower aperture allows for more light to be captured by the camera's sensor, which can be especially beneficial for Night mode photos.
Apple's latest iPhone 16 models also add a new Camera Control button (located on the lower right-hand side when holding the phone in portrait mode). The new button aims to make it easier to adjust photography settings when shooting with the iPhone in both portrait and landscape orientation. By default, a single click of the Camera Control button brings up the Camera app, which is where the button's additional functionality lays hidden, but it can be easily invoked with light press gestures.
The iPhone 16 Pro's 25x digital zoom limit still falls below the competition. Samsung's latest Galaxy S24 Ultra smartphone for example has 100x Space Zoom that can capture images from 330 feet away, while the Pixel 8 Pro has 30x digital "Super Res Zoom" with its 5x optical zoom lens.
To its credit though, Apple has never leaned into digital zoom because the quality is poor. Optical zoom provides a crisp, clear image using the camera hardware, but digital zoom uses software enhancement to crop in.
Both devices share other camera improvements. The iPhone 16 Pro models have a 48-megapixel "Fusion" camera, a new name that Apple is using for the Main camera. There is no improvement to the ƒ/1.78 aperture or second-generation sensor-shift optical image stabilization, but there is a new second-generation quad-pixel sensor. Both models also have a 48-megapixel Ultra Wide camera, up from 12 megapixels, and it has with an ƒ/2.2 aperture.
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