| Multiple Monitors - Glossary of pertinent LCD Panel and Multi-Display Terms and Concepts >>To search by term or concept depress 'Control' and 'F' key - then enter desired text. Bezel widths The smaller the bezel the more tighly you can position the screens to each other and the more natural your multi screen system is going to look and feel. Aluminum housings - in order to maintain the smallest gaps possible between screens, screen housings made out of aluminum are superior to the more common plastic enclosures. Plastic requires curves, outward angles, and more material in manufacturing. By using aluminum manufacturers are able to achieve minimal bezel dimension which of course minimizes the gaps between multiple monitor screens. Example of screen in metal housing. Analog vs Digital - When the video signal information is sent from the computer CPU to the computer video card it is sent in digital. Because CRT monitors were analog based devices, the CRT monitors needed something to convert the video signal to analog so it could process the information. It became the job of the video card inside the computer to take the digital information being sent from the computer and turn the digital information coming into analog. Once the video card converts the digital information into analog it then sends the video signal to the monitor. Viewable angle - this is extremely important in multi monitor computing in that it enables you to view a screen from an angle without it fading and appearing weak. Most screens feature 170 degree viewing from both up and down and well as left and right directions and at a minim are 160 degrees. ACR/NEMA American College of Radiology/National Electrical Manufacturers Association. active matrix A liquid crystal display structure in which switching transistors or diodes are attached to each pixel to control the on/off voltage. It produces a brighter and sharper display with a broader viewing angle than a passive matrix display. Also known as AMLCD (active matrix liquid crystal display). See TFT (thin film transistor). additive primaries In color reproduction, red, green, and blue. When lights in these colors are combined in equal amounts, they produce the visual sensation of white light. When these are combined at varying intensities, a range of different colors is produced. Combining two primaries at 100% produces a subtractive primary, either cyan, magenta, or yellow. See subtractive primaries. chromaticity diagram, CIE x,y A two-dimensional graph of the chromaticity coordinates, x as the abscissa and y as the ordinate, which shows the spectrum locus (chromaticity coordinates of monochromatic light, 380 nm-770 nm). It has many useful properties for comparing colors of both luminous and nonluminous materials. CIE (Commission Internationale de l'Eclairage) The International Commission on Illumination, the primary international organization concerned with color and color measurement. CIE chromaticity coordinates The ratios of each of the tristimulus values of a color to the sum of the tristimulus values. In the CIE systems they are designated by x, y, and z. CIE standard observer A hypothetical observer having the tristimulus color-mixture data recommended in 1931 by the CIE for a 2° viewing angle. A supplementary observer for a larger angle of 10° was adopted in 1964. If not specified, the 2° standard observer should be assumed. If the field of view is larger than 4°, the 10° standard observer should be used. column driver Small electronic circuits that provide voltages to the individual sub-pixel through the source lines. These are generally 8-bit driver circuits that provide 256 unique values per sub-pixel. color temperature A measurement of the color of light radiated by an object while it is being heated. This measurement is express in terms of absolute scale, or degrees Kelvin. Lower Kelvin temperatures such as 2400° K are red; higher temperatures such as 9300° K are blue. Neutral temperature is white, at 6504° K. contrast The level of variation between light and dark areas in an image. contrast ratio The ratio of intensity between the brightest white and the darkest black of a particular device or a particular environment. convergence Alignment of the vertical and horizontal lines in an image. DICOM (Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine). The DICOM standard contains a display function standard. digital driving level (DDL) A digital value which given as input to a display system produces a luminance. The set of DDLs of a display system is all the possible discrete values that can produce luminance values on the display system. The mapping of DDLs to luminance values for a display system produces the characteristic curve of that display system. The actual output for a given DDL is specific to the display system and is not corrected for the grayscale standard display function. double-domain A technique used to improve the viewing angle where multiple alignment directions are produced on the same subpixel. fluorescent lamp A glass tube filled with mercury gas and coated on its inner surface with phosphors. When the gas is charged with an electrical current, radiation is produced which in turn energizes the phosphors, causing the phosphors to glow. foot Lamberts (fL) A unit of luminance. One foot Lambert is equal to 10.76/? (approximately 3.426) Candelas per square meter. gamma Screen luminance as a function of video voltage approximately follows a mathematical power function of the input video signal, the exponent of which is called gamma. gate electrode The "row" electrode in an active matrix LCD that controls whether a voltage is applied to a sub-pixel. grayscale An achromatic scale ranging from black through a series of successively lighter grays to white. Such a series may be made up of steps, which appear to be equally distant from one another or may be arranged according to some other criteria such as a geometric progression based on lightness. IPS (In Plane Switching) A technique of improving the viewing angle of an LCD where the liquid crystal molecules are switched in the plane of the LCD layer rather than vertical to it. JND (Just Noticeable Difference) The luminance difference of a given target under given viewing conditions that the average human observer can just perceive. landscape - A page or screen orientation that is wider than it is tall. LCD (liquid crystal display) A display composed of liquid crystal suspended between two transparent sheets. The display is composed of pixels or other shapes which can be turned on or off with electrical stimulation. Typically, a light is passed through the LCD to illuminate the pixels. liquid crystal The compound found in liquid crystal displays. Liquid crystal reacts predictably when electrically stimulated. This makes it the ideal compound to turn LCD pixels "on" or "off." Liquid crystal is sometimes abbreviated as LC. luminance A measure of the brightness or luminous intensity of light, usually expressed in units of Candelas per square meter (cd/m2) or foot Lamberts. 1 fL = 3.426 cd/m2. nanometer (nm) A unit of length equal to 10-9 meter. In light measurement, the wavelength of light is measured in nanometers. The portion of the spectrum that we perceive as visible light includes wavelengths from about 380 nm to 770 nm. nit A unit of luminance equal to 1 cd/m2 or 0.292 ftL. normally black A twisted nematic LCD design where the backlight is blocked when pixels are in the unselected state. Therefore, when no voltage is applied, the screen is black. normally white A twisted nematic LCD design where light is transmitted when pixels are in the unselected state. Therefore, when no voltage is applied, the screen is white. persistence The time it takes for the visible glow of a CRT's phosphor to darken after the scanning electron beam is removed. A long persistence means less flicker, but may create smearing when images are in motion. pixel PICture Element; the smallest element on a computer CRT or LCD unit. phosphor The coating on the inside of CRTs. Phosphor glows when struck with electrons. Images appear on a CRT by controlled scanning of an electron beam. polarizer A light filter which only allows light waves of a certain rotation through. Polarized material with perpendicular filtering is used in LCDs to enclose the liquid crystal. The liquid crystal is then used as the medium which twists the light waves 90° in order to allow the light to pass through or not. portrait A page or screen orientation that is taller than it is wide. refresh rate The number of times per second the screen is refreshed or redrawn. This number is usually stated in Hz (Hertz) or cycles per second. A rate of 60 Hz is equal to 60 times per second. reliability The ability of an instrument to perform as specified without premature failure. repeatability The degree of agreement among independent measurements of a quantity under the same conditions. SMPTE - Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers. sub-pixel Each pixel is made up of three independently controlled sub-pixels. In a color display these sub-pixels have red, green, or blue color filters. Or, in the case of a grayscale display, each sub-pixel will have a clear transparent filter, allowing the full grayscale range to be displayed. Each sub-pixel is capable of generating different intensities, creating a range of colors or grayscale values, which is perceived as a mixture of each sub-pixel value. subtractive primaries The process colors cyan, magenta, and yellow. Each absorbs or subtracts its complementary colorred, green, or bluefrom the light reflecting off the paper. TFT (thin film transistor) Usually made from amorphous silicon (a-Si) and used as a switch to a charge storage device located below each sub-pixel on an active matrix LCD. |
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