toolman Posted August 29, 2004 Posted August 29, 2004 I've bee wondering this for ages and havnt found an answer. I was wondereing how colours are projected in the monitor? I know its done digitally, but how does it actually produce the colour?
toolman Posted August 29, 2004 Author Posted August 29, 2004 just a standard CFT, but i was wondering how the scrren produces colours? is there a physicial colour element inside?
Rakdos Posted August 29, 2004 Posted August 29, 2004 electrons are excited into certian color wavlengths and strike the screen producing the color
osram Posted August 29, 2004 Posted August 29, 2004 Red, blue and green "lamps" sends out color. The monitor mixes those colors inte the one you see. If you have a small drop of water on the screen you can see those "lamps".
Dave Posted August 30, 2004 Posted August 30, 2004 http://computer.howstuffworks.com/monitor.htm All you ever needed to know. It's a little more complex than "lamps" - they use cathode ray tubes (i.e. a beam of electrons).
osram Posted August 30, 2004 Posted August 30, 2004 All you ever needed to know. It's a little more complex than "lamps" - they use cathode ray tubes (i.e. a beam of electrons). That's why I used ", cause I didn't know exactly what it was =). Thank you for telling. But a beam of electrons... can we see that? Don't you mean photons? =/ The electrons hit the screen, coated with phosphor which glows.
Dave Posted August 30, 2004 Posted August 30, 2004 Have a look at this. Phospherous material on the screen.
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