brightness

Part of the TechTarget Network of Enterprise IT Web Sites
Home Look It Up ITKnowledge Exchange Fast References Products White Papers Blogs

Search our IT-specific encyclopedia for:
 
OR Jump to a topic:
 
Advanced Search
Browse alphabetically:
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z #
All Categories Peripherals

brightness

Hue, saturation, andbrightness are aspects of color in the red, green, and blue ( RGB ) scheme. These terms are most often used in reference to the color of each pixel in a cathode ray tube ( cathode ray tube )display. All possible colors can be specified according to hue,saturation, andbrightness (also called brilliance ), just as colors can berepresented in termsof the R, G, and B components. Most sources of visible light contain energy over a band of wavelength . Hue is the wavelength within the visible-light spectrum at which the energy output from a source is greatest. This is shown as the peak of the curves in the accompanying graph of intensity versus wavelength. In this example, all three colors have the same hue, with a wavelength slightly longer than 500 nanometers, in theyellow-green portion of the spectrum.

Hue/saturation/brightness

Saturation is an expression for the relative bandwidth ofthe visible output from a light source. In the diagram, the saturation isrepresented by thesteepness of the slopes of the curves. Here, the redcurverepresents acolor having low saturation, the green curve represents a color havinggreatersaturation,and the blue curve represents a color with fairly high saturation. Assaturationincreases, colors appear more "pure." As saturationdecreases, colorsappear more "washed-out."

Brightness is a relative expression of the intensity of theenergy outputof a visible light source. It can be expressed as a total energyvalue(differentfor each of the curves in the diagram), or as the amplitude at thewavelengthwhere theintensity is greatest (identical for all three curves). In the RGBcolormodel, theamplitudes of red, green, and blue for a particular color can each rangefrom0 to 100percent of full brilliance. These levels are represented by the rangeofdecimalnumbers from 0 to 255, or hexadecimal numbers from 00 to FF.



Last updated on: Apr 05, 2005

Overheard
"In a matter of days, Mr. Spitzer went from potential presidential candidate to — in the tech world, at least — the poster boy for software usually used to snare fraudsters, money launderers and terrorists."


WORD OF THE DAY...
anti-money laundering software (AML)
LEARN MORE ABOUT...
Advanced Television Systems Committee
Adobe Buzzword
BeOS
  StumbleUpon Toolbar StumbleUpon WhatIs.com  
WhatIs.com RSS Feeds
Home Look It Up ITKnowledge Exchange Fast References Products White Papers Blogs
About Us   |   Contact Us   |   For Advertisers   |   For Business Partners   |   Reprints   |   RSS   |   Awards
TechTarget provides enterprise IT professionals with the information they need to perform their jobs - from developing strategy, to making cost-effective IT purchase decisions and managing their organizations' IT projects - with its network of technology-specific Web sites, events and magazines.

TechTarget Corporate Web Site  |  Media Kits  |  Reprints  |  Site Map




All Rights Reserved, Copyright 2008, TechTarget | Read our Privacy Policy
  TechTarget - The IT Media ROI Experts