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A
computer display monitor, usually called simply a
monitor, is a piece of electrical equipment which displays viewable images generated by a computer without producing a permanent record. The word "monitor" is used in other contexts; in particular in
television broadcasting, where a
television picture is displayed to a high standard. A computer display device is usually either a
cathode ray tube or some form of flat panel such as a
TFT LCD. The monitor comprises the display device,
electronic circuit to generate a picture from
electronics signal (electrical engineering) sent by the computer, and an enclosure (electrical) or case. Within the computer, either as an integral part or a plugged-in interface, there is circuitry to convert internal data (computing) to a format compatible with a monitor.
Cathode ray tube
The CRT or cathode ray tube, is the
picture tube of a monitor. The back of the tube has a negatively charged cathode. The
electron gun shoots electrons down the tube and onto a charged screen. The screen is coated with a pattern of dots that glow when struck by the electron stream. Each cluster of three dots, one of each color, is one
pixel.
The image on the monitor screen is usually made up from at least tens of thousands of such tiny dots glowing on command from the computer. The closer together the pixels are, the sharper the image on screen. The distance between pixels on a computer monitor screen is called its dot pitch and is measured in millimeters. Most monitors have a dot pitch of 0.28 mm or less.
There are two electromagnets around the collar of the tube which deflect the electron beam. The beam scans across the top of the monitor from left to right, is then blanking and moved back to the left-hand side slightly below the previous trace (on the next
scan line), scans across the second line and so on until the bottom right of the screen is reached. The beam is again vertical blanking interval, and moved back to the top left to start again. This process draws a complete picture, typically 50 to 100 times a second. The number of times in one second that the electron gun redraws the entire image is called the refresh rate and is measured in
hertz (cycles per second). It is common, particularly in lower-priced equipment, for all the odd-numbered lines of an image to be traced, and then all the even-numbered lines; the circuitry of such an interlaced display need be capable of only half the speed of a non-
interlaced display. An interlaced display, particularly at a relatively low refresh rate, can appear to some observers to
flicker, and may cause eyestrain and nausea.
Imaging technologies
As with television, several different hardware technologies exist for displaying computer-generated output:
- Liquid crystal display (LCD). LCDs are the most popular display device for new computers in the Western world.
- Cathode ray tube (CRT)
- Vector graphics displays, as used on the Vectrex, many scientific and radar applications, and several early arcade machines (notably Asteroids (game) - always implemented using CRT displays due to requirement for a deflection system, though can be emulated on any raster scan-based display.
- Television receivers were used by most early personal and home computers, connecting composite video to the television set using a modulator. Image quality was reduced by the additional steps of composite video → modulator → TV tuner → composite video.
- Plasma display
- Surface-conduction electron-emitter display (SED)
- Video projector - implemented using LCD, CRT, or other technologies. Recent consumer-level video projectors are almost exclusively LCD based.
- Organic light-emitting diode (OLED) display
Performance measurements
The performance parameters of a monitor are:
- Luminance, measured in candelas per square metre (cd/m²).
- Size, measured diagonally. For CRT the viewable size is one inch (25 mm) smaller then the tube itself.
- Dot pitch. Describes the distance between pixels of the same color in millimetres. In general, the lower the dot pitch (e.g. 0.24 mm, which is also 240 micrometres), the sharper the picture will appear.
- Response time. The amount of time a pixel in an LCD monitor takes to go from active (black) to inactive (white) and back to active (black) again. It is measured in milliseconds (ms). Lower numbers mean faster transitions and therefore fewer visible image artifacts.
- Refresh rate. The number of times in a second that a display is illuminated.
- Power consumption, measured in watts (W).
- Computer display standard, which is the horizontal size compared to the vertical size, e.g. 4:3 is the standard aspect ratio, so that a screen with a width of 1024 pixels will have a height of 768 pixels. A widescreen display can have an aspect ratio of 16:9, which means a display that is 1024 pixels wide will have a height of 576 pixels.
- Display resolution. The number of distinct pixels in each dimension that can be displayed.
Problems
Dead pixels
A fraction of all LCD monitors are produced with "
dead pixels"; due to the desire to increase profit margins by companies, most manufacturers sell monitors with dead pixels. Almost all manufacturers have clauses in their warranties which claim monitors with fewer than some number of dead pixels is not broken and will not be replaced. The dead pixels are usually stuck with the green, red, and/or blue subpixels either individually always stuck on or off. Like image persistence, this can sometimes be partially or fully reversed by using the same method listed below, however the chance of success is far lower than with a "stuck" pixel.
Phosphor burn-in
Phosphor burn-in, where a static image left on the screen for a long time embeds the image into the phosphor that coats the screen, is an issue with
cathode ray tube and
Plasma display computer monitors and televisions. The result of phosphor burn-in are "ghostly" images of the static object visible even when the screen has changed, or is even off. This effect usually fades after a period of time. LCD monitors, while lacking phosphor screens and thus immune to phosphor burn-in, have a similar condition known as
image persistence, where the pixels of the LCD monitor "remember" a particular color and become "stuck" and unable to change. Unlike phosphor burn-in, however, image persistence can sometimes be reversed partially or completely. This is accomplished by rapidly displaying varying colors to "wake up" the
stuck pixels.
Screensavers using moving images, prevent both of these conditions from happening by constantly changing the display. Newer monitors are more resistant to burn-in, but it can still occur if static images are left displayed for long periods of time.
Other
With exceptions of DLP, most display technologies, especially LCD, have an inherent misregistration of the color planes, that is, the centres of the red, green, and blue dots do not line up perfectly.
Subpixel rendering depends on this misalignment; technologies making use of this include the Apple II from
1976 , and more recently Microsoft (
ClearType,
1998) and
XFree86 (X Rendering Extension).
Display interfaces
Computer Terminals
Early CRT-based VDUs (Visual Display Units) such as the
DEC VT05 without computer graphics capabilities gained the label
glass teletypes, because of the functional similarity to their electromechanical predecessors.
Composite monitors
Early home computers such as the
Apple II and the Commodore 64 used
composite monitors. However, they are now used with
video game consoles.
Digital monitors
Early digital monitors are sometimes known as TTLs because the voltages on the red, green, and blue inputs are compatible with
transistor-transistor logic logic chips. Later digital monitors support low voltage differential signaling, or
Transition Minimized Differential Signaling protocols.
TTL monitors
with green monochrome display
Monitors used with the Monochrome Display Adapter, Hercules Graphics Card, Color Graphics Adapter, and Enhanced Graphics Adapter graphics adapters used in early IBM PC's (Personal Computer) and clones were controlled via
transistor-transistor logic logic. Such monitors can usually be identified by a male DE-9 connector connector used on the video cable. The disadvantage of TTL monitors was the limited number of colors available due to the low number of digital bits used for video signaling. Modern monochrome monitors, such as the one pictured to the right which was manufactured in 2007, use the same 15-pin SVGA connector that standard color monitors use. They're capable of displaying 32-bit grayscale at 1024x768 resolution, making them able to interface and be used with modern computers.
Green screen only made use of five out of the nine pins. One pin was used as a ground, and two pins were used for horizontal/vertical synchronization. The electron gun was controlled by two separate digital signals, a video bit, and an intensity bit to control the brightness of the drawn pixels. Only four unique shades were possible; black, dim, medium or bright.
CGA monitors used four digital signals to control the three electron guns used in color CRTs, in a signalling method known as
RGBI, or
Red Green and Blue, plus luminous intensity. Each of the three RGB colors can be switched on or off independently. The intensity bit increases the brightness of all guns that are switched on, or if no colors are switched on the intensity bit will switch on all guns at a very low brightness to produce a dark grey. A CGA monitor is only capable of rendering 16 unique colors. The CGA monitor was not exclusively used by PC based hardware. The Commodore 128 could also utilize CGA monitors. Many CGA monitors were capable of displaying composite video via a separate jack.
EGA monitors used six digital signals to control the three electron guns in a signalling method known as
RrGgBb. Unlike CGA, each gun is allocated its own intensity bit. This allowed each of the three primary colors to have four different states (off, soft, medium, and bright) resulting in 64 possible colors.
Although not supported in the original IBM specification, many vendors of clone graphics adapters have implemented backwards monitor compatibility and auto detection. For example, EGA cards produced by Paradise could operate as a MDA, or CGA adapter if a monochrome or CGA monitor was used in place of an EGA monitor. Many CGA cards were also capable of operating as MDA or Hercules card if a monochrome monitor was used.
Modern technology
Analog RGB monitors
Most modern
computer displays can show thousands or millions of different colors in the
RGB color space by varying red, green, and blue signals in continuously variable intensities.
Digital and analog combination
Many monitors have
analog video signal relay, but some more recent models (mostly LCD screens) support digital input signals. It is a common misconception that all computer monitors are digital. For several years,
televisions, composite monitors, and computer displays have been significantly different. However, as TVs have become more versatile, the distinction has blurred.
Configuration and usage
Multi-head
Some users use more than one monitor. The displays can operate in multiple modes. One of the most common spreads the entire desktop over all of the monitors, which thus act as one big desktop. The
X Window System refers to this as
Xinerama.
Terminology:
- Dualhead - Using two monitors
- Triplehead - using three monitors
- Display assembly - multi-head configurations actively managed as a single unit
Virtual displays
The X Window System provides configuration mechanisms for using a single hardware monitor for rendering multiple virtual displays, as controlled (for example) with the Unix DISPLAY
global variable or with the -display command option.
Major manufacturers
See also
- 3D display - a computer display capable of conveying three-dimensional images to the viewer.
- Color calibration - used to calibrate a computer monitor or display.
- Computer display standard
- Screenless - computing without a display
External links
- Monitor troubleshooting and repair
- General SVGA monitor diagram
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