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File:Abney effect RGB.svg

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Summary

Description
English: An illustration of the Abney effect. The RGB primaries on a typical display is not monochromatic, making the effect weaker than the usual experimental setup. However, it is usually still possible to see the effect in the blue example, with the middle shades appearing to be purple.

The mixing ratio step appears to be 10% in the gamma-corrected sRGB mixing system, but is in fact [0, 1.0022825574869039, 3.3104766570885054, 7.323895587840543, 13.286832155381797, 21.404114048223256, 31.854677812509184, 44.798841244188324, 60.38273388553378, 78.74122893956172, 100] in linear light. (A true 10% step would be appear too washed out.)

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Author Goran tek-en, following request by and knowledge from Artoria2e5
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This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license.
Attribution: Goran tek-en
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Captions

An illustration of the Abney effect. The RGB primaries on a typical display is not monochromatic, making the effect weaker than the usual experimental setup. However, it is usually still possible to see the effect in the blue example.

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2 March 2021

image/svg+xml

256e2494be40b6d4b6771b21c40cc2c0ed9a2616

20,802 byte

895 pixel

1,178 pixel

File history

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Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current15:55, 2 March 2021Thumbnail for version as of 15:55, 2 March 20211,178 × 895 (20 KB)Goran tek-enNot necessary to do this according to me.
15:27, 2 March 2021Thumbnail for version as of 15:27, 2 March 2021512 × 389 (5 KB)Artoria2e5Partly-manual source code cleanup. Clones are used to manage the identical shapes. A big note is added for the grey blending.
14:29, 2 March 2021Thumbnail for version as of 14:29, 2 March 20211,178 × 895 (20 KB)Goran tek-en{{Information |description ={{en|An illustration of the {{w|Abney effect}}. The RGB primaries on a typical display is not monochromatic, making the effect weaker than the usual experimental setup. However, it is usually still possible to see the effect in the blue example. The mixing ratio step appears to be 10% in the {{w|gamma-corrected}} {{w|sRGB}} mixing system, but is in fact <code>[0, 1.0022825574869039, 3.3104766570885054, 7.323895587840543, 13.286832155381797, 21.404114048223256,...

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