Color temperature – Philips LP2PB201CS User Manual

Page 30

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The numbers x and y do not have units of measurements; while there are two main

units of measurement of factor Y in use today: ‘Candela per square meter” (Nit) and
‘Foot Lamberts’(FI).

If we consider your Brilliance 201CS monitor, it has three preset RGB white balan­

ce adjustments that, according to the CIE xyY system, can be defined as follows:

Preset 1

X = 0,283 y -= 0,298

Y > 28 Foot Lamberts

Preset 2

x - 0,313 y = 0,329

Y > 23 Foot Lamberts

Preset 3

X = 0,332 y = 0,347

Y > 23 Foot Lamberts

Color temperature

According to the Black body radiation theory in physics, an ideal object will glow with
a characteristic color when heated. The color can be calculated mathematically and

it can be shown that as the temperature increases this glow moves from infra red

through dull red, orange, yellow, yellow white and eventually to bluish white.

As the color produced at a given temperature can be precisely predicted, then it is

possible to define white light in terms of color temperature.

The white point color temperature is therefore a measure in Kelvin degrees of ‘how
white’ a white is.

Back to your Brilliance 201 CS, the Preset 1 adjustment corresponds to a color tem­
perature of 9300 Kelvin degrees and shows a bluish tint; Preset 2 is set to 6500
Kelvin degrees and has a reddish tint. Preset 3 is set to 5500 Kelvin degrees.

As an additional example, the color temperature of sunlight at noon, when the sun

is shining directly overhead, is approximately 5000 Kelvin degrees.

Appendix A

23

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