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Laptop Screens
You mentioned before that a color laptop
screen is somewhat like a TV screen, in that each pixel is made up of three
"cells," red, green, and blue.
That's right. Each "cell" is one of those devices we talked about: two
polaroid filters with a twisted liquid crystal cell between them, an electric
field that can be adjusted, and a red, blue or green filter. A whole pixel
would look something like this:
Click on the white control boxes in the back to turn each
"cell" on or off. The square at the right shows the result, mixing the colors
you've turned on.
I see--if you light up the red and green cells and darken the blue one, you
get a yellow pixel, and so forth. But there are only eight possible colors
you can get. I would think you'd need more subtle color variations than
this--the way we did for color TV.
Exactly. So when you send light through that second polarizer, you don't
want it to be an all-or-nothing proposition; you want to be able to let
through any fraction of the light you desire.
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That means you'd have to change the amount that the liquid crystal twists
the light.
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That's right. Do you have any suggestions as to how such a thing could be
accomplished?
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