A component of the active matrix liquid crystal display (LCD) panel. The color filter contains primary colors - red, green and blue - that enable the LCD to produce more than 16 million colors.
A sheet of dyed glass, gelatin or plastic, or dyed gelatin cemented between glass plates, used in photography to absorb certain colors and transmit others. The filters used for color separation are blue, green and red.
The predominant method of producing colored light is the use of color filters with a 'white' light source. The white source contains all of the colors of the spectrum; the filter absorbs the unwanted parts of the spectrum and transmits the wavelengths that make up the desired color.
Filters uses in making color separations, red, blue, green.
Color media placed in front of or within a lighting fixture to alter the color of the light produced. Filters for conventional fixtures are often made of a dyed polyester film. Since dyed filters work by absorbing unwanted colors and passing desired colors, they deteriorate from heat and must be replaced when they "burn up". Automated fixtures use more permanent dichroic color filters which are created by vacuum depositing thin films onto heat resistant glass. See Also: Dichroic Color Filter
The section of a flat panel display that is broken into areas of red, green and blue. Using a transistor, varying amounts of lights are transmitted through the color filter to create millions of colors.
A sheet of dyed glass, gelatin, or plastic placed between plates to absorb certain colors and produce a better rendition of other colors. The filters used in color separation are red, green, and blue.
Dyed gelatin or plastic under glass, used to absorb certain colors and improve others. Blue, green, and red filters are used in making color separations.