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Output devices COMP 3003 University College Dublin 1 Hardware Issues (Display Technology) Different output devices may be used - monitors, printers, plotters Most common is the Cathode Ray Tube (CRT) monitor – Horizontal and vertical deflectors focus an electron beam emitted by an electron gun on any spot on a phosphor coated screen – The maximum number of points, or pixels that can be displayed without overlap is called the resolution, e.g. 1024x768, 800x600 etc. – Colour systems have groups of 3 different phosphors, for red, green and blue (the primary colours) – The CRT uses a combination of these phosphors to emit different coloured light University College Dublin 2 Phosphors Once struck by the electron beam most phosphors relax back to the ground state by emitting a photon of light This light is called fluorescence, which normally decays in under a millisecond Some molecules may be further excited, and emit a light call phosphorescence, which decays slower, but still rapidly (15-20 milliseconds) Therefore, the screen must be refreshed by redrawing the image University College Dublin 3 Phosphors So phosphors may be characterised by their persistence – (time to decay of emitted light) High persistence cheap and good for text, bad for animation (original IBM PC monitor) Low persistence, good for animation, but needs a high refresh rate or flicker can be observed 50-60 Hz is usually sufficient to avoid flicker University College Dublin 4 CRT Interior metallic coating at high positive voltage University College Dublin 5 CRT E GUN Produces constant stream of electrons Control Grid Sets intensity of spot on screen (the more negative Focusing System Forces e-beam into narrow stream (otherwise repel) Deflection Coils Indicates target phosphor spot the control grid voltage the fewer electrons pass through) High positive V coating University College Dublin 15- 20,000 V Accelerates e-beam to screen 6 Vector and Raster Two common techniques are used to draw the graphic on the screen – Vector and Raster Vector was developed in the mid-sixties and was in common use until the mid-eighties Raster was developed in the early seventies and today has mostly replaced vector based systems University College Dublin 7 Vector (Random) Scan System The electron beam directly draws the picture Refresh rate depends the number of lines drawn The picture definition is stored as a set of line-drawing commands in the memory called the refresh display file – To display the picture the system cycles through the set of commands in the display file Good for line-drawing applications CAD – also known as display list, display program or refresh buffer not good for shading etc Also good for smooth curved surfaces – e.g. oscilloscope University College Dublin 8 Vector (Random) Scan System (cont) Advantages are high resolution, easy animation, and requires little memory (just display program), e.g: b a Turn e beam off, move to a. Turn e beam on and draw to b. Repeat move draw sequence. Disadvantages are limited colour capability and flicker occurs as complexity of image increases. University College Dublin 9 Raster Scan Devices Scans the screen from top to bottom in a regular pattern (common TV technology) A Raster is a matrix of pixels (picture elements) covering the screen The electron beam is turned on/off so the image is a collection of dots painted on screen one row (scan line) at a time. University College Dublin 10 Frame Buffer The image information is stored in a special graphics memory area called a frame buffer (or bit map for b/w) Each memory location corresponds to a pixel A display processor scans this memory controls the electron beam at each pixel accordingly For a monochrome system, each pixel is either on or off, so only one bit per pixel is required, and the electron beam is either on or off For grey scale (single electron gun), 8 bits per pixel gives 256 (28) different intensities of grey University College Dublin 11 Accessing the Frame Buffer Frame-buffer locations, and the corresponding screen positions, are referenced in Cartesian co-ordinates Two registers are used to store the co-ordinates of the screen pixels (x,y) Initially x and y are set to zero The associated value is retrieved and used to set the intensity of the electron guns Then x is incremented by 1 and process is repeated for the next pixel until the complete row has been scanned Then set x to zero increment y and start again After cycling through all the pixels start at 0,0 again University College Dublin 12 Aliasing and Anti-aliasing In raster systems curved primitives such as circles can only be drawn by approximating them with pixels on a raster grid – jaggies or staircasing This effect is a manifestation of a sampling error called aliasing Anti-aliasing is a technique by which neighbouring pixels at edges of primitives are set to graduating levels of intensity – I.e. not set to maximum or zero University College Dublin 13 Aliasing and Anti-aliasing Sampling University College Dublin Technique ? 14 Aliasing and Anti-aliasing - Examples University College Dublin 15 Colour Raster Scan System 3 Electron guns used, for R G and B Each pixel consists of 3 dots of phosphor, arranged as triangle (triads) Combining different intensities of these phosphors can generate different colours University College Dublin 16 High-Quality Raster Graphics High-quality raster systems have three electron guns which can have a variety of settings For example 8 possible settings per gun – – – allowing 256 voltage settings for each colour electron gun in total 16,777,216 (256 * 256 * 256) or 17 million approx. possible colours for each pixel 24 bits used for each pixel These systems are generally referred to as fullcolour or true-colour systems University College Dublin 17 Windows NT Example Palette Number of pixels Refresh Frequency University College Dublin 18 Colour Lookup Table In many colour raster systems, the display controller includes a colour lookup table (LUT) The value of a pixel in the frame buffer is not used to directly control the beam, but is an index into the LUT The entry in the LUT is used to directly control the colour of the pixel e.g. – – – – – – 1 byte (8 bits) per pixel in frame buffer This gives address for 256 (28) entries in the LUT Each entry in the LUT is 24 bits (8 bits per primary colour) So 256 (28) colours out of 17 million available colours The application set up the LUT as required Provides a fast method of controlling beam intensity University College Dublin 19 Raster Scan System: conclusion Advantages – – – of Raster Scan systems: Low cost (memory has become cheap) Refresh rate independent of image complexity Can handle colour and filled areas Disadvantages – Uses more memory » – – Over come by some degree by using an LUT Mathematical models of objects must be scan converted by the host processor aliasing University College Dublin 20 Direct View Storage tube (DVST) Similar to standard CRT except image is stored as a distribution of charges on the inner side of the screen. Advantages: – No Constant Refresh Required Disadvantages: – To update any part of image must redraw all University College Dublin 21 Liquid Crystal Display (LCD) Used in flat panel displays (reduced volume, weight and power requirements Called non-emissive: they do not covert electrical energy into light but use optical effects to convert light into graphical patterns Polarised light is passed through a liquid crystal material whose molecules can be aligned to block or transmit the light University College Dublin 22 Liquid Crystal Display (LCD) Orientation of molecules controls polarization of light Current forces allignment of molecules Light can’t pass – absorbed – black. Current applied using 2 grids to give X, Y co-ords University College Dublin 23 Liquid Crystal Display (LCD) Liquid crystal: material that has crystalline arrangement of molecules but flows like a liquid It is a (nematic) threadlike material that tends to keep the long axes of the rod-shaped molecules aligned University College Dublin 24 Liquid Crystal Display (LCD) The light entering through the front layer is polarised vertically If the molecules are arranged in a spiral fashion, they rotate the direction of the light by 90 degrees. Then the light passes through If the crystals are in an electrical field they do not change the direction of the light and the light does not pass University College Dublin 25 University College Dublin Vertical Polarizer Vertical Grid Wires Liquid Crystal Layer Horizontal Grid Wires Six Horizontal Polarizer Reflective Layer Liquid Crystal Display (LCD) Layers Viewing Direction 26