Canon 80D has a
24.0MP APS-C (22.5 x 15 mm ) sized CMOS sensor and features DIGIC 6 processor. On the other hand, Olympus E-M10 has a
16.0MP Four Thirds (17.3 x 13 mm ) sized CMOS sensor and features TruePic VII processor.
Canon 80D's sensor provides 8MP more than Olympus E-M10's sensor, which gives a significant advantage in real life. You can print your images larger or crop more freely.
On the other hand, please keep in mind that Max sensor resolution is not the only determinant of resolving power. Factors such as the optical elements, low pass filter, pixel size and sensor technology also affects the final resolution of the captured image.
Below you can see the 80D and E-M10 sensor size comparison.
As seen above, Canon 80D has a 1.5x Larger sensor area than Olympus E-M10. Larger sensors give photographer more control on the depth of field and blurry background compared to smaller sensor when shot in same focal length and aperture.
DxOMark Sensor Scores
Both Canon 80D and Olympus E-M10 sensors have been tested by DxoMark. DxoMark scores camera sensors for color depth (DXO Portrait), dynamic range (DXO Landscape) and low-light sensitivity (DXO Sports), and also gives them an overall score. Of the two cameras that we are comparing, 80D has scored 79, 7 points higher than E-M10.
Model |
Overall |
Color Depth |
Dynamic Range |
Low-light ISO |
Canon 80D |
79 |
23.6 bits |
13.2 Evs |
1135 ISO |
Olympus E-M10 |
72 |
22.8 bits |
12.3 Evs |
884 ISO |