3D TV without glasses

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "3D TV without glasses"

Transcription

1 3D TV without glasses Liquid-crystal displays that let viewers watch images in 3D are the latest success story in the electronics industry the only problem being that special spectacles are required. But, as Jonathan Mather explains, liquid-crystal technology is also ideal for glasses-free 3D displays Jonathan Mather is in the optical-imaging and display-systems group at Sharp Laboratories Europe in Oxford, UK, and has helped to commercialize Sharp s glasses-free 3D technology, jonathan.mather@sharp.co.uk (Photolibrary) Wow, that s amazing was at least one visitor s reaction to last year s Summer Science Exhibition at the Royal Society in London. Their enthusiasm was not primarily due to the presence of the Queen, who had earlier opened the exhibition as part of the society s 350th anniversary celebrations. Rather, their excitement was down to the latest liquid-crystal displays on show from Sharp Laboratories in Oxford. Viewers were able to watch moving images in 3D on a laptop without the need for special glasses. They could see pigeons being fed in St Marks Square, Venice, with the birds apparently descending from their shoulders, or they could indulge in a 3D adventure as they pursued the bad guys in the interactive computer game Quake. The glasses-free 3D display on show at the Royal Society was just the latest example of the revolution wrought by liquid-crystal displays, which now allow moving images to be viewed on everything from mobile phones and 46-inch flat-screen televisions to hand-held personal electronic games and the ipad and other tablet devices. Yet it is amazing to think that it is only 40 years since the key patent was filed that marked the birth of the modern liquid-crystal display a technology so successful that its acronym, LCD, is instantly recognized even by non-scientists. Although organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs), plasmas and electronic ink are also changing the nature of the modern display, it is the remarkable properties of liquid crystals that are now at the forefront of 3D display technology. Imaging in 3D Watching images in 3D without glasses is a truly astounding experience, but let s first look at how this fits in with other 3D imaging techniques. There are three main techniques stereoscopic, holographic and volumetric all of which operate on the same principles regardless of whether the screen uses liquid crystals, plasmas or OLEDs. They each have advantages and disadvantages in terms of realism, complexity, size and cost, but the most commercially viable method, which is used in the bulk of the 3D televisions taking the high street by storm, involves showing a different perspective of an image to each of

2 our eyes. This stereoscopic technique mimics the real world, where each eye sees a different perspective and the brain fuses the two images together to create a 3D perception of the surroundings (figure 1a). 1 An overview of glasses-free 3D displays There are three main techniques for creating 3D images. (a) The stereoscopic approach, which is used in the latest glasses-free products, involves sending separate images to the left and right eyes, with different designs allowing the 3D display to be watched by a user sitting in either a fixed or movable position or by multiple users. One drawback is that the images are not totally accurate because all objects in them are in focus, regardless of their intended 3D position. (b) Holographic displays offer truly 3D images, but are technically more complex. (c) Volumetric displays also offer truly 3D images, but can suffer from transparency. The task of separately displaying images to the left and right eye has been tackled in a variety of ingenious ways over the years. Trialled at cinemas as far back as the 1950s, the approach that many people will be familiar with involves the user wearing glasses with separate red and blue coloured lenses on the left and right eye, respectively. The idea here is that an image is split into red, green and blue channels, with the left eye seeing only the red image and the right eye seeing only the green and blue images. More recent systems do away with coloured lenses and instead use glasses that alternately transmit and block light to each eye. In other words, the lenses act as optical shutters so that at any one moment one eye can see a still image, but the other cannot. If we label the successive still images of a movie L1, R1, L2, R2, L3, R3 and so on, then the left eye sees only the L scenes and the right eye sees only the R scenes. These glasses require various bit of electronics to make them work, while the scenes themselves are updated at frequencies of typically 120 Hz or 240 Hz. (An alternative approach common with projection screens found in pubs to watch sport on is for the L and R scenes to be displayed with different polarizations, which requires the user to wear dark glasses containing lenses with different polarizations.) The images produced using this stereoscopic approach can jump out of the screen with surprising realism. However, stereoscopic images are not perfect because all objects in them are in focus, regardless of their intended 3D position. In the real world, in con- trast, different depths of a 3D image are in focus at different positions. One technique for creating 3D images that does deal with focus correctly is holography (figure 1b). Holograms are created by recording in a photosensitive material the interference pattern created when coherent reflected light from an object overlaps with a coherent reference beam of the same wavelength. The pattern is stored as a change in absorption, refractive index or thickness of the photosensitive material and a copy of the object can be recreated by illuminating the pattern with a read-out laser. A 3D hologram is essentially like having a stack of high-resolution 2D pictures, where each picture represents a different image plane.

3 The big advantage with a 3D hologram is that a viewer s perception of three-dimensionality is total because to change from looking at an object near the front of the scene to an object at the back, the viewer needs to adjust their eyes focus. Unfortunately, creating and controlling optical wavefronts with sufficient precision to generate realistic holographic images requires displays with pixel densities typically thousands of times higher than are found in today s commercial LCDs, as well as prodigious amounts of computer processing power to handle the volumes of data needed. So although their images are superior, further technical innovation is still required before holographic displays become a commercial reality. Stereoscopy, in contrast, relies on the fact that our brains are good at deducing depth from our right and left eyes having different perspectives of an image. In practice this means that a stereoscopic display can create a 3D image using only twice the amount of data that a normal display needs to make a 2D image, which is why they are proving so commercially promising. The third approach to making 3D displays is to do away with conventional 2D pixels arranged in a plane and instead use 3D, volumetric pixels, or voxels. One way of creating such voxels is to use projectors shining at a spinning screen (figure 1c). By synchronizing the projectors with the screen, light can be reflected off the screen at any position within the cylindrical volume that it sweeps out. Although volumetric displays can create a strong 3D impression, one snag is that the light projected into the volume of the display is free to propagate throughout this space. This can make items transparent, with objects supposedly hidden behind others tending to shimmer through those in front. Volumetric displays also tend to be fairly bulky. Glasses-free stereoscopy So far we have described glasses-based stereoscopic 3D displays, but what everyone wants is to do away with the glasses altogether. This is an active area of research being pursued by probably every major displays company and from which new consumer products are now starting to emerge. Nintendo, for example, has already released its glasses-free Nintendo 3DS games console, while 3D mobile phones are available from Sharp. All such glasses-free displays are based on stereoscopy and the challenge is to ensure that different images are directed to each eye. There are three main methods of achieving this, each of which has its own advantages and disadvantages depending on what it might be used for. The most common approach is where the user has to sit in a fixed position in front of the screen, and this is used, for example, on the Nintendo 3DS, Sharp s LYNX 3D SH-03C mobile phone and in the display on the back of Fujifilm s W3 3D camera. The next approach involves the display tracking the viewing position of the user, and although there are currently no products using this currently on the market, prototype designs have been shown at industry exhibitions in recent years. The final tack is multi view, which is already found in some glassesfree 3D televisions, although they have not made big inroads into the market as yet partly because it is not easy to generate multi-view 3D without changing broadcasting standards. 2 Through the barrier A 100 scale model of a glasses-free 3D liquid-crystal display. The image is divided into tiny stripes L, R, L, R, L, R etc and the viewer looks at the pixels from a specific position through a parallax barrier (a), which is designed so that the left eye sees only the L images (b) and the right eye sees only the R images (c). One disadvantage is that as each eye sees only half the pixels, light travelling in the wrong direction is absorbed by the barrier, reducing intensity and resolution. The fixed-position method assumes that the user views the display head-on so their gaze is at 90 to the display itself (figure 1a) an assumption that is valid for most mobile devices. The image is separated into tiny stripes L, R, L, R, L, R, with all the L images being sent to the left eye and all the R images being sent to the right eye by means of a physical device known as a parallax barrier (figure 2). This technique, which has been known for almost 70 years, could of course be applied to any images be they photos or paintings not just an LCD display, provided of course that the left and right images can be interlaced into left and right image stripes to work with the parallax barrier. A disadvantage of the parallax barrier is that

4 because each eye is allowed to see only half the pixels, light travelling in the wrong direction i.e. from an L stripe to the right eye or from the R stripe to the left eye is absorbed by the barrier. This cuts the intensity from the display by about half and reduces the resolution. In practical terms, this means that when the display is being used in conventional 2D mode, the parallax barrier should be removed. In most 3D displays, such as Sharp s 3D mobile phone, this is achieved by making the barrier from a liquid-crystal layer that can be turned on or off electrically. It would of course be much more efficient to dispense with a parallax barrier and instead use lenses, which are transparent, to redirect the L and R light to the appropriate eye. Indeed, researchers have already developed high-quality cylindrical lenses using liquid crystals that can do just that. The principle is simple: as the refractive index of liquid crystals varies with voltage, lenses made from these materials can be turned on when a voltage is applied and off when the voltage is removed. These cylindrical liquid-crystal lenses take the place of the parallax barrier, redirecting the light in the correct direction (figure 3). This technology is likely to double the efficiency of glasses-free 3D displays in the future, with many companies known to be actively carrying out research into them. 3 See-through barrier One disadvantage of the parallax-barrier technique to creating glasses-free 3D images (see figure 2) is that the barrier reduces the intensity and resolution of the light sent to the right (R) and left (L) eyes. A solution is to construct the barrier from a transparent liquid-crystal layer with electrically switchable lensing, shown here in cross-section. When a voltage is applied between the electrodes, it creates an electric field that varies across the liquid-crystal layer, gradually changing the orientation of the molecules and hence the refractive index of the layer. The lens can be turned off when the voltage is removed. One drawback of parallax technology is that the user has to sit in a certain position relative to the screen. The tracked viewing position technique, in contrast, allows 3D screens to be viewed without glasses from any angle by tracking the user s head position. This could be achieved by, for example, fitting a laptop with a forward-facing web camera to identify the location of the user s face and eyes. Indeed, this technology is already common in many digital cameras sold on the high street to ensure that a face automatically becomes the centre of focus. All that is then needed for glasses-free 3D viewing is an automatically adjustable parallax barrier that can change the angle at which the left and right images are seen. The camera can then identify the position of the user, while the parallax barrier directs the left and right perspectives at the appropriate angle. This adjustment can be carried out using face-tracking algorithms written onto image-processing chips, which operate very efficiently, meaning that not too much processing power is required. The camera can also monitor how far a user is sitting from the screen and adjust the images accordingly. In practice, the viewer can move up to 30 cm from the ideal viewing distance, while their side-to-side movement is limited to about ±30 from the normal. Accommodating more than one user is in principle possible, but the complexity of the system is significantly increased. In addition to the viewer being free to move around, the other advantage of the tracked-viewing-position system is that if the image happens to be from a computergenerated scene, the viewpoint could be adjusted according to the user s position. For example, a viewer could literally look around the side of an object (a cube say) to bring previously unseen faces of it into view.

5 As for the third method for generating glasses-free 3D multi-view its goal is to work with a wide range of viewing positions and multiple viewers. To do this the display outputs not just two perspectives but typically eight or more. The user can then position their eyes to see perspectives 1 and 3, or 2 and 4, etc, so the 3D effect can be achieved from a wide range of angles. A multi-view system with, say, eight views requires eight times greater resolution than a 2D system, and some ingenuity is required to synthesize the eight views or transmit them in the available television bandwidth. Nevertheless, this technology is probably the strongest contender for glasses-free 3D television, with Philips and Toshiba both having already launched a multi-view television onto the market. Fast forward Research to reality Glasses-free 3D displays can now be found in real products on the high street, such as Sharp s LYNX 3D SH-03C smartphone. As we have discussed, Sharp has already designed and built a liquid-crystal screen on one of its mobile phones that functions as a switchable parallax barrier. Used in tandem with a conventional liquid-crystal display provided with stereoscopic input data, this system gives high-quality glasses-free 3D images. However, the electronic media industry has a vision of the future in which 3D displays are not just a niche product but an integral part of modern life. That means home-cinema systems showing 3D movies, computer games being played with an immersive 3D environment, and holiday photographs being presented with depth. We can therefore expect a variety of 3D generation methods to become available for the different applications, and within each method we can expect improved optical technologies, and new related technologies such as those enabling 3D interaction. It is highly probable that all such devices will exploit the particular electro-optical properties of liquid crystals. The products on display at the Royal Society exhibition last summer, which are already coming on the market this year, are just the start.

How To Use 3D On A Computer Or Tv

How To Use 3D On A Computer Or Tv Display technologies seminar 3D Displays What is 3D? 3D History 3D production 3D Displays 3D now Agenda 13 May 2010 Metropolia University of Applied Sciences Lauri Virkki What is 3D? Eyes are average 64

More information

Understanding astigmatism Spring 2003

Understanding astigmatism Spring 2003 MAS450/854 Understanding astigmatism Spring 2003 March 9th 2003 Introduction Spherical lens with no astigmatism Crossed cylindrical lenses with astigmatism Horizontal focus Vertical focus Plane of sharpest

More information

Introduction to 3D Imaging

Introduction to 3D Imaging Chapter 5 Introduction to 3D Imaging 5.1 3D Basics We all remember pairs of cardboard glasses with blue and red plastic lenses used to watch a horror movie. This is what most people still think of when

More information

Displays. Cathode Ray Tube. Semiconductor Elements. Basic applications. Oscilloscope TV Old monitors. 2009, Associate Professor PhD. T.

Displays. Cathode Ray Tube. Semiconductor Elements. Basic applications. Oscilloscope TV Old monitors. 2009, Associate Professor PhD. T. Displays Semiconductor Elements 1 Cathode Ray Tube Basic applications Oscilloscope TV Old monitors 2 1 Idea of Electrostatic Deflection 3 Inside an Electrostatic Deflection Cathode Ray Tube Gun creates

More information

Epson 3LCD Technology A Technical Analysis and Comparison against 1-Chip DLP Technology

Epson 3LCD Technology A Technical Analysis and Comparison against 1-Chip DLP Technology An Epson White Paper Epson 3LCD Technology A Technical Analysis and Comparison against 1-Chip DLP Technology Epson South Asia & Southeast Asia June 2010 About 3LCD Technology 3LCD Technology is the world

More information

INFITEC - A NEW STEREOSCOPIC VISUALISATION TOOL BY WAVELENGTH MULTIPLEX IMAGING

INFITEC - A NEW STEREOSCOPIC VISUALISATION TOOL BY WAVELENGTH MULTIPLEX IMAGING INFITEC - A NEW STEREOSCOPIC VISUALISATION TOOL BY WAVELENGTH MULTIPLEX IMAGING Helmut Jorke, Markus Fritz INFITEC GmbH, Lise-Meitner-Straße 9, 89081 Ulm info@infitec.net Phone +49 731 550299 56 Fax _

More information

No glasses please! A short introduction to SeeFront s glasses-free 3D technology. SeeFront GmbH 2013

No glasses please! A short introduction to SeeFront s glasses-free 3D technology. SeeFront GmbH 2013 No glasses please! A short introduction to SeeFront s glasses-free 3D technology. 1 SeeFront s approach to glasses-free 3D Let the display wear the 3D glasses! 2 Different approaches to Autostereoscopy:

More information

Data Sheet. definiti 3D Stereo Theaters + definiti 3D Stereo Projection for Full Dome. S7a1801

Data Sheet. definiti 3D Stereo Theaters + definiti 3D Stereo Projection for Full Dome. S7a1801 S7a1801 OVERVIEW In definiti 3D theaters, the audience wears special lightweight glasses to see the world projected onto the giant dome screen with real depth perception called 3D stereo. The effect allows

More information

WHITE PAPER. Are More Pixels Better? www.basler-ipcam.com. Resolution Does it Really Matter?

WHITE PAPER. Are More Pixels Better? www.basler-ipcam.com. Resolution Does it Really Matter? WHITE PAPER www.basler-ipcam.com Are More Pixels Better? The most frequently asked question when buying a new digital security camera is, What resolution does the camera provide? The resolution is indeed

More information

Stereoscopic 3D Video in the Home

Stereoscopic 3D Video in the Home Stereoscopic 3D Video in the Home Many consumers are looking with interest at all the 3D TV and projector models that are now becoming available to them, and most of them hope that they don t need to replace

More information

Unit A451: Computer systems and programming. Section 2: Computing Hardware 4/5: Input and Output Devices

Unit A451: Computer systems and programming. Section 2: Computing Hardware 4/5: Input and Output Devices Unit A451: Computer systems and programming Section 2: Computing Hardware 4/5: Input and Output Devices Input and Output devices Candidates should be able to: (a) understand the need for input and output

More information

Color holographic 3D display unit with aperture field division

Color holographic 3D display unit with aperture field division Color holographic 3D display unit with aperture field division Weronika Zaperty, Tomasz Kozacki, Malgorzata Kujawinska, Grzegorz Finke Photonics Engineering Division, Faculty of Mechatronics Warsaw University

More information

Holograpic Data Storage Uses Volumetric Crystal Media

Holograpic Data Storage Uses Volumetric Crystal Media Holograpic Data Storage Uses Volumetric Crystal Media R. Vasantham, II- MCA IFET COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT OF COMPUTER APPLICATIONS ABSTRACT Holographic Data Storage will store up to 1 TB of data

More information

1. Three-Color Light. Introduction to Three-Color Light. Chapter 1. Adding Color Pigments. Difference Between Pigments and Light. Adding Color Light

1. Three-Color Light. Introduction to Three-Color Light. Chapter 1. Adding Color Pigments. Difference Between Pigments and Light. Adding Color Light 1. Three-Color Light Chapter 1 Introduction to Three-Color Light Many of us were taught at a young age that the primary colors are red, yellow, and blue. Our early experiences with color mixing were blending

More information

PROPOSED SYSTEM FOR MID-AIR HOLOGRAPHY PROJECTION USING CONVERSION OF 2D TO 3D VISUALIZATION

PROPOSED SYSTEM FOR MID-AIR HOLOGRAPHY PROJECTION USING CONVERSION OF 2D TO 3D VISUALIZATION International Journal of Advanced Research in Engineering and Technology (IJARET) Volume 7, Issue 2, March-April 2016, pp. 159 167, Article ID: IJARET_07_02_015 Available online at http://www.iaeme.com/ijaret/issues.asp?jtype=ijaret&vtype=7&itype=2

More information

3D Modeling Using Stereo Projection

3D Modeling Using Stereo Projection 3D Modeling Using Stereo Projection TOMAS POPEK, MARTIN NEMEC, MICHAL KRUMNIKL, RADOSLAV FASUGA VSB-Technical University of Ostrava Department of Computer Science 17. Listopadu 15/2172 70030 Ostrava Czech

More information

Aperture, Shutter speed and iso

Aperture, Shutter speed and iso Aperture, Shutter speed and iso These are the building blocks of good photography and making good choices on the combination of these 3 controls will give superior results than you will get by using the

More information

International Journal of Advance Research in Computer Science and Management Studies

International Journal of Advance Research in Computer Science and Management Studies Volume 3, Issue 2, February 2015 ISSN: 2321 7782 (Online) International Journal of Advance Research in Computer Science and Management Studies Research Article / Survey Paper / Case Study Available online

More information

COMP175: Computer Graphics. Lecture 1 Introduction and Display Technologies

COMP175: Computer Graphics. Lecture 1 Introduction and Display Technologies COMP175: Computer Graphics Lecture 1 Introduction and Display Technologies Course mechanics Number: COMP 175-01, Fall 2009 Meetings: TR 1:30-2:45pm Instructor: Sara Su (sarasu@cs.tufts.edu) TA: Matt Menke

More information

Shutter Speed in Digital Photography

Shutter Speed in Digital Photography Shutter Speed in Digital Photography [Notes from Alan Aldrich as presented to the Hawkesbury Camera Club in April 2014] Light is a form of energy and as such behaves as formulated in the general power

More information

STAAR Science Tutorial 30 TEK 8.8C: Electromagnetic Waves

STAAR Science Tutorial 30 TEK 8.8C: Electromagnetic Waves Name: Teacher: Pd. Date: STAAR Science Tutorial 30 TEK 8.8C: Electromagnetic Waves TEK 8.8C: Explore how different wavelengths of the electromagnetic spectrum such as light and radio waves are used to

More information

One-Way Pseudo Transparent Display

One-Way Pseudo Transparent Display One-Way Pseudo Transparent Display Andy Wu GVU Center Georgia Institute of Technology TSRB, 85 5th St. NW Atlanta, GA 30332 andywu@gatech.edu Ali Mazalek GVU Center Georgia Institute of Technology TSRB,

More information

A technical overview of the Fuel3D system.

A technical overview of the Fuel3D system. A technical overview of the Fuel3D system. Contents Introduction 3 How does Fuel3D actually work? 4 Photometric imaging for high-resolution surface detail 4 Optical localization to track movement during

More information

Most laptops allow you to plug in a second monitor, which can be a TV screen or Projector I will refer to a monitor in this document.

Most laptops allow you to plug in a second monitor, which can be a TV screen or Projector I will refer to a monitor in this document. Introduction This is a guide to setting up / using a laptop with a TV screen or projector. IT IS STRONGLY RECOMMENDED THAT YOU TRY THIS OUT SOME TIME AHEAD OF YOUR PRESENTATION. PowerPoint If using PowerPoint

More information

Light Waves and Matter

Light Waves and Matter Name: Light Waves and Matter Read from Lesson 2 of the Light Waves and Color chapter at The Physics Classroom: http://www.physicsclassroom.com/class/light/u12l2a.html MOP Connection: Light and Color: sublevel

More information

Light and its effects

Light and its effects Light and its effects Light and the speed of light Shadows Shadow films Pinhole camera (1) Pinhole camera (2) Reflection of light Image in a plane mirror An image in a plane mirror is: (i) the same size

More information

Comp 410/510. Computer Graphics Spring 2016. Introduction to Graphics Systems

Comp 410/510. Computer Graphics Spring 2016. Introduction to Graphics Systems Comp 410/510 Computer Graphics Spring 2016 Introduction to Graphics Systems Computer Graphics Computer graphics deals with all aspects of creating images with a computer Hardware (PC with graphics card)

More information

SafetyScan Lens. User Manual

SafetyScan Lens. User Manual SafetyScan Lens User Manual Contents Introduction 2 Lens selection 3 Beam quality parameter Using the tables Use with lasers whose M 2 is 1.2 4 Use with lasers whose M 2 is 3.0 5 Use with lasers whose

More information

Binocular Vision and The Perception of Depth

Binocular Vision and The Perception of Depth Binocular Vision and The Perception of Depth Visual Perception How one visually interprets a scene 4 forms of perception to be studied: Depth Color Temporal Motion Depth Perception How does one determine

More information

DOLBY SR-D DIGITAL. by JOHN F ALLEN

DOLBY SR-D DIGITAL. by JOHN F ALLEN DOLBY SR-D DIGITAL by JOHN F ALLEN Though primarily known for their analog audio products, Dolby Laboratories has been working with digital sound for over ten years. Even while talk about digital movie

More information

A CRITICAL EVALUATION OF NEWLY EMERGING HOLOGRAPHIC DATA STORAGE

A CRITICAL EVALUATION OF NEWLY EMERGING HOLOGRAPHIC DATA STORAGE 193 A CRITICAL EVALUATION OF NEWLY EMERGING HOLOGRAPHIC DATA STORAGE Mehmet C. OKUR * ABSTRACT This article presents an assesment of the long awaited holographic data storage technology and its possible

More information

3D TV test signals in line with the HDMI 1.4a interface standard

3D TV test signals in line with the HDMI 1.4a interface standard 3D TV test signals in line with the HDMI 1.4a interface standard Meeting the new T & M challenges that new 3D technologies create for TV manufacturers Broadcasting/Test & Measurement Application Brochure

More information

Review Vocabulary spectrum: a range of values or properties

Review Vocabulary spectrum: a range of values or properties Standards 7.3.19: Explain that human eyes respond to a narrow range of wavelengths of the electromagnetic spectrum. 7.3.20: Describe that something can be seen when light waves emitted or reflected by

More information

WHICH HD ENDOSCOPIC CAMERA?

WHICH HD ENDOSCOPIC CAMERA? WHICH HD ENDOSCOPIC CAMERA? Colin Dobbyne ORTV 2 Hillcrest Park, Hoyle Road Calverton, Nottingham NG14 6QJ t. +44 (0)115 965 55 77 f: +44 (0)115 965 55 22 e: sales@or-tv.net Welcome Thank you for downloading

More information

THE COMPOUND MICROSCOPE

THE COMPOUND MICROSCOPE THE COMPOUND MICROSCOPE In microbiology, the microscope plays an important role in allowing us to see tiny objects that are normally invisible to the naked eye. It is essential for students to learn how

More information

AP Physics B Ch. 23 and Ch. 24 Geometric Optics and Wave Nature of Light

AP Physics B Ch. 23 and Ch. 24 Geometric Optics and Wave Nature of Light AP Physics B Ch. 23 and Ch. 24 Geometric Optics and Wave Nature of Light Name: Period: Date: MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1) Reflection,

More information

Tuesday 20 May 2014 Morning

Tuesday 20 May 2014 Morning Tuesday 20 May 2014 Morning AS GCE PHYSICS B (ADVANCING PHYSICS) G491/01 Physics in Action *1203458796* Candidates answer on the Question Paper. OCR supplied materials: Data, Formulae and Relationships

More information

Camera Resolution Explained

Camera Resolution Explained Camera Resolution Explained FEBRUARY 17, 2015 BY NASIM MANSUROV Although the megapixel race has been going on since digital cameras had been invented, the last few years in particular have seen a huge

More information

Physics 441/2: Transmission Electron Microscope

Physics 441/2: Transmission Electron Microscope Physics 441/2: Transmission Electron Microscope Introduction In this experiment we will explore the use of transmission electron microscopy (TEM) to take us into the world of ultrasmall structures. This

More information

Plasma Display Panel (PDP) vs. Liquid Crystal Display (LCD) Technology: An Overview of Consumer Benefits for Home Theater Applications

Plasma Display Panel (PDP) vs. Liquid Crystal Display (LCD) Technology: An Overview of Consumer Benefits for Home Theater Applications Plasma Display Panel (PDP) vs. Liquid Crystal Display (LCD) Technology: An Overview of Consumer Benefits for Home Theater Applications prepared by Fujitsu General America, Inc. September 2003 Plasma Display

More information

Kapitel 12. 3D Television Based on a Stereoscopic View Synthesis Approach

Kapitel 12. 3D Television Based on a Stereoscopic View Synthesis Approach Kapitel 12 3D Television Based on a Stereoscopic View Synthesis Approach DIBR (Depth-Image-Based Rendering) approach 3D content generation DIBR from non-video-rate depth stream Autostereoscopic displays

More information

Video Conferencing Display System Sizing and Location

Video Conferencing Display System Sizing and Location Video Conferencing Display System Sizing and Location As video conferencing systems become more widely installed, there are often questions about what size monitors and how many are required. While fixed

More information

Science In Action 8 Unit C - Light and Optical Systems. 1.1 The Challenge of light

Science In Action 8 Unit C - Light and Optical Systems. 1.1 The Challenge of light 1.1 The Challenge of light 1. Pythagoras' thoughts about light were proven wrong because it was impossible to see A. the light beams B. dark objects C. in the dark D. shiny objects 2. Sir Isaac Newton

More information

Viewer sees picture in 3D. Array of cameras Video multiplexer Autostereoscopic 3D display ❻ ❺ ❹ ❶ ❷❸

Viewer sees picture in 3D. Array of cameras Video multiplexer Autostereoscopic 3D display ❻ ❺ ❹ ❶ ❷❸ Autostereoscopic 3D Display in Laparoscopic Surgery N. A. Dodgson 1, N. E. Wiseman 1, S. R. Lang 1,D.C.Dunn 2,A.R.L.Travis 3 1 Computer Laboratory, Pembroke Street CB2 3QG 2 Department of Surgery, Addenbrooke's

More information

Chapter 1 Parts C. Robert Bagnell, Jr., Ph.D., 2012

Chapter 1 Parts C. Robert Bagnell, Jr., Ph.D., 2012 Chapter 1 Parts C. Robert Bagnell, Jr., Ph.D., 2012 Figure 1.1 illustrates the parts of an upright compound microscope and indicates the terminology that I use in these notes. Figure 1.1. Parts of a Compound

More information

Dolby Vision for the Home

Dolby Vision for the Home Dolby Vision for the Home 1 WHAT IS DOLBY VISION? Dolby Vision transforms the way you experience movies, TV shows, and games with incredible brightness, contrast, and color that bring entertainment to

More information

Experiment 5. Lasers and laser mode structure

Experiment 5. Lasers and laser mode structure Northeastern University, PHYS5318 Spring 2014, 1 1. Introduction Experiment 5. Lasers and laser mode structure The laser is a very important optical tool that has found widespread use in science and industry,

More information

Crystal Optics of Visible Light

Crystal Optics of Visible Light Crystal Optics of Visible Light This can be a very helpful aspect of minerals in understanding the petrographic history of a rock. The manner by which light is transferred through a mineral is a means

More information

Basic Optics System OS-8515C

Basic Optics System OS-8515C 40 50 30 60 20 70 10 80 0 90 80 10 20 70 T 30 60 40 50 50 40 60 30 C 70 20 80 10 90 90 0 80 10 70 20 60 50 40 30 Instruction Manual with Experiment Guide and Teachers Notes 012-09900B Basic Optics System

More information

Understanding Depth Of Field, Aperture, and Shutter Speed Supplement to Mastering the Nikon D7000

Understanding Depth Of Field, Aperture, and Shutter Speed Supplement to Mastering the Nikon D7000 Understanding Depth Of Field, Aperture, and Shutter Speed Supplement to Mastering the Nikon D7000 This supplemental information is intended for readers of Mastering the Nikon 7000 only. Please do not distribute

More information

Graphical displays are generally of two types: vector displays and raster displays. Vector displays

Graphical displays are generally of two types: vector displays and raster displays. Vector displays Display technology Graphical displays are generally of two types: vector displays and raster displays. Vector displays Vector displays generally display lines, specified by their endpoints. Vector display

More information

Color and Light. DELTA SCIENCE READER Overview... 125 Before Reading... 126 Guide the Reading... 127 After Reading... 133

Color and Light. DELTA SCIENCE READER Overview... 125 Before Reading... 126 Guide the Reading... 127 After Reading... 133 Color and Light T ABLE OF CONTENTS ABOUT DELTA SCIENCE MODULES Program Introduction................... iii Teacher s Guide..................... iv Delta Science Readers............... vi Equipment and

More information

Physics 25 Exam 3 November 3, 2009

Physics 25 Exam 3 November 3, 2009 1. A long, straight wire carries a current I. If the magnetic field at a distance d from the wire has magnitude B, what would be the the magnitude of the magnetic field at a distance d/3 from the wire,

More information

WHO CARES ABOUT RESOLUTION?

WHO CARES ABOUT RESOLUTION? WHO CARES ABOUT RESOLUTION? At Poli we certainly do not care about resolution as a concept! However we do care deeply about resolution when used as a measure of quality. Resolution is a very dry and technical

More information

Interference. Physics 102 Workshop #3. General Instructions

Interference. Physics 102 Workshop #3. General Instructions Interference Physics 102 Workshop #3 Name: Lab Partner(s): Instructor: Time of Workshop: General Instructions Workshop exercises are to be carried out in groups of three. One report per group is due by

More information

Ultimate versatility.

Ultimate versatility. Acer recommends Windows. Aspire Switch 10 E One device. Four modes. Ultimate versatility. Acer recommends Windows. Scratch-resistant design Great flexibility Long lasting productivity Acer recommends Windows.

More information

Choosing a digital camera for your microscope John C. Russ, Materials Science and Engineering Dept., North Carolina State Univ.

Choosing a digital camera for your microscope John C. Russ, Materials Science and Engineering Dept., North Carolina State Univ. Choosing a digital camera for your microscope John C. Russ, Materials Science and Engineering Dept., North Carolina State Univ., Raleigh, NC One vital step is to choose a transfer lens matched to your

More information

Scanners and How to Use Them

Scanners and How to Use Them Written by Jonathan Sachs Copyright 1996-1999 Digital Light & Color Introduction A scanner is a device that converts images to a digital file you can use with your computer. There are many different types

More information

TVL - The True Measurement of Video Quality

TVL - The True Measurement of Video Quality ACTi Knowledge Base Category: Educational Note Sub-category: Video Quality, Hardware Model: N/A Firmware: N/A Software: N/A Author: Ando.Meritee Published: 2010/10/25 Reviewed: 2010/10/27 TVL - The True

More information

The Trade-off between Image Resolution and Field of View: the Influence of Lens Selection

The Trade-off between Image Resolution and Field of View: the Influence of Lens Selection The Trade-off between Image Resolution and Field of View: the Influence of Lens Selection I want a lens that can cover the whole parking lot and I want to be able to read a license plate. Sound familiar?

More information

Information. From the LowVision Specialists. Guidelines for the fitting of telescopic systems

Information. From the LowVision Specialists. Guidelines for the fitting of telescopic systems Information From the LowVision Specialists Guidelines for the fitting of telescopic systems About a successful fitting Eye care professionals dispensing telescopic spectacles must ensure they have successfully

More information

Digital Photography Composition. Kent Messamore 9/8/2013

Digital Photography Composition. Kent Messamore 9/8/2013 Digital Photography Composition Kent Messamore 9/8/2013 Photography Equipment versus Art Last week we focused on our Cameras Hopefully we have mastered the buttons and dials by now If not, it will come

More information

Technology Update White Paper. High Speed RAID 6. Powered by Custom ASIC Parity Chips

Technology Update White Paper. High Speed RAID 6. Powered by Custom ASIC Parity Chips Technology Update White Paper High Speed RAID 6 Powered by Custom ASIC Parity Chips High Speed RAID 6 Powered by Custom ASIC Parity Chips Why High Speed RAID 6? Winchester Systems has developed High Speed

More information

White paper. HDTV (High Definition Television) and video surveillance

White paper. HDTV (High Definition Television) and video surveillance White paper HDTV (High Definition Television) and video surveillance Table of contents Introduction 3 1. HDTV impact on video surveillance market 3 2. Development of HDTV 3 3. How HDTV works 4 4. HDTV

More information

VZ-C3D Visualizer. Bringing reality closer in 3D

VZ-C3D Visualizer. Bringing reality closer in 3D EN VZ-C3D Visualizer Bringing reality closer in 3D Introducing the world s first 3D Visualizer VZ-C3D Ceiling Visualizer WolfVision is a globally successful family owned company based in Austria/Europe.

More information

Beyond Built-in: Why a Better Webcam Matters

Beyond Built-in: Why a Better Webcam Matters Whitepaper: Beyond Built-in: Why a Better Webcam Matters How to Uplevel Your Ability to Connect, Communicate and Collaborate Using Your Laptop or PC Introduction The ability to virtually communicate and

More information

TIME WARNER DIGITAL CABLE

TIME WARNER DIGITAL CABLE IF IT S WORTH WATCHING IN 3D IT S ON TIME WARNER DIGITAL CABLE 3D TV FAQ & SETUP GUIDE What Equipment do I Need to View Sports in 3D? Equipment I Need Time Warner Digital Cable Set Top Box (Connected Directly

More information

A More Efficient Way to De-shelve 137 Ba +

A More Efficient Way to De-shelve 137 Ba + A More Efficient Way to De-shelve 137 Ba + Abstract: Andrea Katz Trinity University UW REU 2010 In order to increase the efficiency and reliability of de-shelving barium ions, an infrared laser beam was

More information

OmniBSI TM Technology Backgrounder. Embargoed News: June 22, 2009. OmniVision Technologies, Inc.

OmniBSI TM Technology Backgrounder. Embargoed News: June 22, 2009. OmniVision Technologies, Inc. OmniBSI TM Technology Backgrounder Embargoed News: June 22, 2009 OmniVision Technologies, Inc. At the heart of any digital camera lies the image sensor. The image sensor is an integrated circuit, like

More information

LIGHT SECTION 6-REFRACTION-BENDING LIGHT From Hands on Science by Linda Poore, 2003.

LIGHT SECTION 6-REFRACTION-BENDING LIGHT From Hands on Science by Linda Poore, 2003. LIGHT SECTION 6-REFRACTION-BENDING LIGHT From Hands on Science by Linda Poore, 2003. STANDARDS: Students know an object is seen when light traveling from an object enters our eye. Students will differentiate

More information

AN OPINION COMPOSITION

AN OPINION COMPOSITION 1 AN OPINION COMPOSITION When you are writing an essay that asks you to discuss a topic or give your opinion on a question, it is important to organize your thoughts and present your arguments clearly

More information

Sony Releases the Transparent Lens Eyewear SmartEyeglass Developer Edition

Sony Releases the Transparent Lens Eyewear SmartEyeglass Developer Edition News & Information 1-7-1 Konan, Minato-ku, Tokyo Sony Corporation No. 15-016E February 17, 2015 Sony Releases the Transparent Lens Eyewear SmartEyeglass Developer Edition - Promotes the development of

More information

INVENTION DISCLOSURE

INVENTION DISCLOSURE 1. Invention Title. Utilizing QR Codes within ETV Applications 2. Invention Summary. By combining QR codes with ETV applications, a number of obstacles can be overcome. Placing QR codes in the graphics

More information

Dynamic Digital Depth (DDD) and Real-time 2D to 3D conversion on the ARM processor

Dynamic Digital Depth (DDD) and Real-time 2D to 3D conversion on the ARM processor Dynamic Digital Depth (DDD) and Real-time 2D to 3D conversion on the ARM processor November 2005 Abstract The use of mobile devices for entertainment consumption is a rapidly growing, global industry.

More information

Optical Fibres. Introduction. Safety precautions. For your safety. For the safety of the apparatus

Optical Fibres. Introduction. Safety precautions. For your safety. For the safety of the apparatus Please do not remove this manual from from the lab. It is available at www.cm.ph.bham.ac.uk/y2lab Optics Introduction Optical fibres are widely used for transmitting data at high speeds. In this experiment,

More information

Why Touch Technology?

Why Touch Technology? Touch panel technology Touchscreen applications are developing into a major display market niche as they ramp up their utilization of Liquid Crystal Display (LCD) flat panels into their designs. Touch

More information

Ultra-High Definition TV Acquisition and Exchange

Ultra-High Definition TV Acquisition and Exchange Application Note April 2013 Ultra-High Definition TV Acquisition and Exchange The TV industry is moving towards the next generation of high quality TV screen technology; Ultra High Definition Television

More information

CONFOCAL LASER SCANNING MICROSCOPY TUTORIAL

CONFOCAL LASER SCANNING MICROSCOPY TUTORIAL CONFOCAL LASER SCANNING MICROSCOPY TUTORIAL Robert Bagnell 2006 This tutorial covers the following CLSM topics: 1) What is the optical principal behind CLSM? 2) What is the spatial resolution in X, Y,

More information

FIFTH GRADE TECHNOLOGY

FIFTH GRADE TECHNOLOGY FIFTH GRADE TECHNOLOGY 3 WEEKS LESSON PLANS AND ACTIVITIES SCIENCE AND MATH OVERVIEW OF FIFTH GRADE SCIENCE AND MATH WEEK 1. PRE: Interpreting data from a graph. LAB: Estimating data and comparing results

More information

White paper. CCD and CMOS sensor technology Technical white paper

White paper. CCD and CMOS sensor technology Technical white paper White paper CCD and CMOS sensor technology Technical white paper Table of contents 1. Introduction to image sensors 3 2. CCD technology 4 3. CMOS technology 5 4. HDTV and megapixel sensors 6 5. Main differences

More information

Rodenstock Photo Optics

Rodenstock Photo Optics Rogonar Rogonar-S Rodagon Apo-Rodagon N Rodagon-WA Apo-Rodagon-D Accessories: Modular-Focus Lenses for Enlarging, CCD Photos and Video To reproduce analog photographs as pictures on paper requires two

More information

Mitsubishi Digital Electronics America Adds New 75-Inch LaserVue TV to Bolster Industry s Broadest Line of 60-Inch-and-Larger 3D TVs Available Today

Mitsubishi Digital Electronics America Adds New 75-Inch LaserVue TV to Bolster Industry s Broadest Line of 60-Inch-and-Larger 3D TVs Available Today Mitsubishi Digital Electronics America Adds New 75-Inch LaserVue TV to Bolster Industry s Broadest Line of 60-Inch-and-Larger 3D TVs Available Today Giant 75-Inch 3D-Ready LaserVue TV with new Cinema Color

More information

Whitepaper Stereoscopic 3D visualization

Whitepaper Stereoscopic 3D visualization Whitepaper Stereoscopic 3D visualization Bitmanagement offers software for stereoscopic rendering of 3D content such as pictures, films, 3d models from stereoscopic projections to cave solutions up to

More information

2) A convex lens is known as a diverging lens and a concave lens is known as a converging lens. Answer: FALSE Diff: 1 Var: 1 Page Ref: Sec.

2) A convex lens is known as a diverging lens and a concave lens is known as a converging lens. Answer: FALSE Diff: 1 Var: 1 Page Ref: Sec. Physics for Scientists and Engineers, 4e (Giancoli) Chapter 33 Lenses and Optical Instruments 33.1 Conceptual Questions 1) State how to draw the three rays for finding the image position due to a thin

More information

1. The FOXTEL iq remote control

1. The FOXTEL iq remote control Quickstart Guide 1. The FOXTEL iq remote control FOXTEL Takes you from the TV Guide (or any FOXTEL screen) to the last channel you were watching. Takes you back to FOXTEL after you have been using AV mode

More information

Computer Vision: Machine Vision Filters. Computer Vision. Optical Filters. 25 August 2014

Computer Vision: Machine Vision Filters. Computer Vision. Optical Filters. 25 August 2014 Computer Vision Optical Filters 25 August 2014 Copyright 2001 2014 by NHL Hogeschool, Van de Loosdrecht Machine Vision BV and Klaas Dijkstra All rights reserved j.van.de.loosdrecht@nhl.nl, jaap@vdlmv.nl,

More information

THE EFFECT OF COLOUR FILTERS ON SOLAR PANELS. Katie Fitzgerald Expo Project Grade 7

THE EFFECT OF COLOUR FILTERS ON SOLAR PANELS. Katie Fitzgerald Expo Project Grade 7 THE EFFECT OF COLOUR FILTERS ON SOLAR PANELS Katie Fitzgerald Expo Project Grade 7 OBSERVATION By using a solar light instead of electricity, one can assist in lightening the load on our environment. By

More information

Space Perception and Binocular Vision

Space Perception and Binocular Vision Space Perception and Binocular Vision Space Perception Monocular Cues to Three-Dimensional Space Binocular Vision and Stereopsis Combining Depth Cues 9/30/2008 1 Introduction to Space Perception Realism:

More information

The following presentation was given by Chris Ward, President of Lightspeed Design, Inc. / DepthQ 3D. June 21, 2015 Barcelona, Spain

The following presentation was given by Chris Ward, President of Lightspeed Design, Inc. / DepthQ 3D. June 21, 2015 Barcelona, Spain The following presentation was given by Chris Ward, President of Lightspeed Design, Inc. / DepthQ 3D June 21, 2015 Barcelona, Spain ICTA - International Cinema Technology Association CineEurope 2015 2015

More information

A Simple Guide To Understanding 3D Scanning Technologies

A Simple Guide To Understanding 3D Scanning Technologies A Simple Guide To Understanding 3D Scanning Technologies First Edition www.lmi3d.com Table of Contents Introduction At LMI Technologies, solving complex problems in a simple way is the philosophy that

More information

Yerkes Summer Institute 2002

Yerkes Summer Institute 2002 Before we begin our investigations into radio waves you should review the following material on your trip up to Yerkes. For some of you this will be a refresher, but others may want to spend more time

More information

WHITE PAPER. P-Iris. New iris control improves image quality in megapixel and HDTV network cameras.

WHITE PAPER. P-Iris. New iris control improves image quality in megapixel and HDTV network cameras. WHITE PAPER P-Iris. New iris control improves image quality in megapixel and HDTV network cameras. Table of contents 1. Introduction 3 2. The role of an iris 3 3. Existing lens options 4 4. How P-Iris

More information

Study of the Human Eye Working Principle: An impressive high angular resolution system with simple array detectors

Study of the Human Eye Working Principle: An impressive high angular resolution system with simple array detectors Study of the Human Eye Working Principle: An impressive high angular resolution system with simple array detectors Diego Betancourt and Carlos del Río Antenna Group, Public University of Navarra, Campus

More information

Rutgers Analytical Physics 750:228, Spring 2016 ( RUPHY228S16 )

Rutgers Analytical Physics 750:228, Spring 2016 ( RUPHY228S16 ) 1 of 13 2/17/2016 5:28 PM Signed in as Weida Wu, Instructor Help Sign Out Rutgers Analytical Physics 750:228, Spring 2016 ( RUPHY228S16 ) My Courses Course Settings University Physics with Modern Physics,

More information

PUMPED Nd:YAG LASER. Last Revision: August 21, 2007

PUMPED Nd:YAG LASER. Last Revision: August 21, 2007 PUMPED Nd:YAG LASER Last Revision: August 21, 2007 QUESTION TO BE INVESTIGATED: How can an efficient atomic transition laser be constructed and characterized? INTRODUCTION: This lab exercise will allow

More information

Flat Panel Displays How does a Flat Panel Display work? Flat Panel Displays

Flat Panel Displays How does a Flat Panel Display work? Flat Panel Displays Flat Panel Displays When talking about computer monitors, the word on the street is that thin is in. For example, at this year s Comdex Fall '98, the computer industry's largest North American tradeshow,

More information

Physical Science Study Guide Unit 7 Wave properties and behaviors, electromagnetic spectrum, Doppler Effect

Physical Science Study Guide Unit 7 Wave properties and behaviors, electromagnetic spectrum, Doppler Effect Objectives: PS-7.1 Physical Science Study Guide Unit 7 Wave properties and behaviors, electromagnetic spectrum, Doppler Effect Illustrate ways that the energy of waves is transferred by interaction with

More information

INTRODUCTION TO RENDERING TECHNIQUES

INTRODUCTION TO RENDERING TECHNIQUES INTRODUCTION TO RENDERING TECHNIQUES 22 Mar. 212 Yanir Kleiman What is 3D Graphics? Why 3D? Draw one frame at a time Model only once X 24 frames per second Color / texture only once 15, frames for a feature

More information

Home Theater. Diagram 1:

Home Theater. Diagram 1: Home Theater What is Home Theater? Since the mid- to late-1990s, home theater systems have rapidly grown in popularity, as consumers have looked for ways to enjoy movies at home the same way they do in

More information

Plasma TV Buying Guide

Plasma TV Buying Guide Plasma TV Buying Guide Plasma TVs are flat, super high-contrast TV sets that are offered in very large sizes, which at the extreme end exceeds 60-inches to provide the one of the most immersive theater-like

More information