Fully revised, this book provides up-to-date coverage of the optical and mechanical systems in electronic projection displays, taking into account major new developments in the technology. It includes new material on microdisplay projection technology, including light sources for projection displays, liquid crystal on silicon (LCoS), display colour gamuts, electronic cinema, projection screen design, and video signal formats. The book provides practical examples of projection display applications and sets out models for predicting the performance of optical and mechanical systems. It also…mehr
Fully revised, this book provides up-to-date coverage of the optical and mechanical systems in electronic projection displays, taking into account major new developments in the technology. It includes new material on microdisplay projection technology, including light sources for projection displays, liquid crystal on silicon (LCoS), display colour gamuts, electronic cinema, projection screen design, and video signal formats. The book provides practical examples of projection display applications and sets out models for predicting the performance of optical and mechanical systems. It also presents information about projection displays at the component, subsystem and system level, with detailed discussions of human factors associated with the displays and an expanded glossary of projection-related terms and acronyms.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Matthew S. Brennesholtz, Insight Media, Pleasantville, NY Dr Brennesholtz is currently a Senior Analyst at Insight Media in the USA. In this position, he works on a variety of topics relating to display systems, including supply chain issues, emerging display technologies and new applications for microdisplay technology. He has also headed research projects on illumination systems for projection displays, covering lasers and conventional lamps, and on a new type of liquid crystal on silicon (LCoS) backplane. In addition to this, he has authored 18 conference and journal papers, and the first edition of Projection Displays (Wiley, 1998) with Edward Stupp. Previous to his employment at Insight Media, Dr Brennesholtz has had positions at Philips and General Electric, and he currently holds 23 patents. Edward H. Stupp, Stupp Associates, Display Consultation, Jackson, NJ Edward Stupp currently runs his own consulting company, advising on display technology for industry. He authored the first edition of Projection Displays (Wiley, 1998) but is not directly contributing to the revision of the second edition. He will be listed as a co-author due to his involvement in the first edition.
Inhaltsangabe
Foreword. Preface to the Second Edition. About the Authors. 1. Introduction. 1.1 Overview of Projection Displays. 1.2 Book Organization. 1.3 What Is Not Covered. 2. Markets and Applications. 2.1 Overview. 2.2 Applications and Performance Requirements. 3. Emissive Image Sources. 3.1 Projection CRTs. 3.2 Field-emission Devices. 4. Liquid Crystal Light Valves and Microdisplays. 4.1 Active Matrices. 4.2 Liquid Crystal Effects. 5. Micro-electromechanical Devices. 5.1 DMD. 5.2 Linear MEMS Arrays. 5.3 MEMS Scanning Mirrors. 6. Filters, Integrators and Polarization Components. 6.1 Factors Affecting Projector Optical Performance. 6.2 Component Efficiency. 6.3 Spectral Filters. 6.4 Integrators. 6.5 Polarization Components. 7. Projection Lenses and Screens. 7.1 Projection Lenses. 7.2 Projection Screens. 7.3 Speckle in Projected Images. 8. Light Sources for Light-valve and Microdisplay Projection Systems. 8.1 Lamp Parameters. 8.2 Types of Projection Lamps. 8.3 Lasers as Projection Light Sources. 8.4 Light Emitting Diodes as Projection Light Sources. 8.5 Efficacy and Lumen Output. 8.6 Spectral Characteristics of Lamps. 8.7 Light Distribution from a HID Lamp. 8.8 Lamp Life. 8.9 Reflectors and Other Collection Systems. 8.10 Lamp Ballasts and Ignitors. 9. Scanned Projection Systems. 9.1 CRT Projectors. 9.2 Scanned Laser Projectors. 10. Microdisplay System Architectures. 10.1 Microdisplay Systems. 10.2 Three Systems with Transmissive Microdisplays. 10.3 Three-panel LCoS Projector Architectures. 10.4 Single-panel Projectors. 10.5 Two-panel Systems. 10.6 Schlieren Optics Based Projectors. 10.7 Stereoscopic 3D Projectors. 11. Modeling Lumen Output. 11.1 Simplified Model. 11.2 Light Collection and Étendue. 11.3 Integrators and Lumen Throughput. 11.4 Microdisplay and Light-valve Properties. 11.5 Full Colorimetric Model of the Projector. 11.6 Problems with Lumen Throughput Calculations. 11.7 Lumen Output Variation in Production. 12. Projector Lumen Throughput. 12.1 Throughput of a Simple Transmissive Projector. 12.2 Throughput in a Three-panel Projector. 12.3 Throughput Estimate Using the Full Colorimetric Model. 13. Characteristics and Characterization. 13.1 Characteristics of the Human Visual System. 13.2 Spatial Characteristics of the Image. 13.3 Luminance, Contrast and Color. 13.4 Image Content-dependent Adaptive Processes. 14. Image Artifacts. 14.1 Spatial Artifacts. 14.2 Temporal Artifacts. Appendix 1 Radiometry and Photometry. Appendix 2 Colorimetry. Appendix 3 Lumen vs Étendue Parametric Model. Appendix 4 Glossary. Index.