Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6242855
-
Patent Number
6,242,855
-
Date Filed
Wednesday, March 10, 199925 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, June 5, 200123 years ago
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Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
- Patel; Ashok
- Santiago; Mariceli
Agents
- Tripoli; Joseph S.
- Irlbeck; Dennis H.
- Herrera; Carlos M.
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 313 402
- 313 403
- 313 407
- 313 408
- 313 479
- 313 477 R
- 445 37
- 445 47
- 445 49
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
An improved color picture tube (10) has a shadow mask (24) mounted therein in spaced relation to a viewing screen (22) thereof. The mask has a rectangular periphery with two long sides and two short sides. A major axis (X) passes through the center of the mask and parallels the long sides thereof, and a minor axis (Y) passes through the center of the mask and parallels the short sides thereof. The mask has an aperture array (35) that includes slit-shaped apertures (36) aligned in columns (37) that essentially parallel the minor axis and end at a border of the aperture array. The improvement comprises the column-to-column spacing (aH) parallel to the major axis including a pseudo-cyclic variation at least in a portion of the mask, wherein a complete cycle within the pseudo-cyclic variation occurs in the column-to-column spacings between no more than nine consecutive columns.
Description
This invention relates to color picture tubes having shadow masks with slit-shaped apertures, wherein the apertures are aligned in columns and the apertures in each column are separated by tie bars in the mask; and, particularly, to such a tube wherein the spacing of aperture columns is varied across a mask to reduce aliasing visibility.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
A predominant number of color picture tubes in use today have line screens and shadow masks that include slit-shaped apertures. The apertures are aligned in columns, and the adjacent apertures in each column are separated from each other by webs or tie bars in the mask. Such tie bars, which define the vertical pitch (a
v
) of the mask, are essential in the mask to maintain its integrity when it is formed into a dome-shaped contour which somewhat parallels the contour of the interior of a viewing faceplate of the tube. In earlier tubes of this type, the separations between adjacent aperture column centerlines along the major axis, or horizontal pitch (a
H
), was held constant from center-to-edge of the mask. However, some later tubes of this type included a shadow mask with increased curvature and incorporated a shadow mask with an aperture column pitch variation as taught in U.S. Pat. No. 4,136,300, issued to A. M. Morrell on Jan. 23, 1979. In such later tubes, the pitch between centerlines of adjacent aperture columns increased from center-to-edge of the mask. This increase varied along the major axis generally as the square of the distance from the minor axis. In yet later tubes, a shadow mask aperture column-to-column pitch that varied along the major axis as the fourth power of the distance from the minor axis, such as taught in U.S. Pat. No. 4,583,022, issued to W. D. Masterton on Apr. 15, 1986, was used.
A problem that may occur during operation of color picture tubes is video aliasing. Video aliasing is an artifact, defect or distortion in a video picture usually occurring when video signals contain high frequencies. Aliasing can occur with both analog and digital video signals. With analog video, aliasing is usually caused by interference between two frequencies, such as might occur between high luminance frequencies and the horizontal spatial frequency due to the horizontal periodicity of the shadow mask of the tube. This aliasing appears as moire or herringbone patterns. With digital video, aliasing is caused by insufficient sampling or poor filtering of the digital signal, and shows up as jagged edges on diagonal lines and fluctuations in picture detail.
In video systems, aliasing will result when an image is sampled that contains frequency components above the Nyquist limit for the sampling rate. The Nyquist frequency (f
N
) is the maximum frequency that a shadow mask can theoretically represent. The easiest solution to this aliasing problem is to increase the Nyquist frequency of the tube by decreasing the horizontal screen pitch. However, this solution has both cost and production limits. Another solution is to design an electron gun which has a larger beam spot at low current. However, a larger beam spot may degrade tube resolution to an unacceptable extent. Therefore, there is a need for solutions to the video aliasing problem which do not have these limitations.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
In accordance with the present invention, an improved color picture tube has a shadow mask mounted therein in spaced relation to a viewing screen thereof. The mask has a rectangular periphery with two long sides and two short sides. A major axis passes through the center of the mask and parallels the long sides thereof, and a minor axis passes through the center of the mask and parallels the short sides thereof. The mask has an aperture array that includes slit-shaped apertures aligned in columns that essentially parallel the minor axis and end at a border of the aperture array. The improvement comprises the column-to-column spacing parallel to the major axis including a pseudo-cyclic variation at least in a portion of the mask, wherein a complete cycle within the pseudo-cyclic variation occurs in the column-to-column spacing between no more than nine consecutive columns.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
In the drawings:
FIG. 1
is an axially sectioned side view of a color picture tube embodying the present invention.
FIG. 2
is front plan view of a mask-frame assembly of the tube of FIG.
1
.
FIG. 3
is an enlarged view of a small portion of a shadow mask of the tube of FIG.
1
.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
FIG. 1
shows a rectangular color picture tube
10
having a glass envelope
11
comprising a rectangular faceplate panel
12
and a tubular neck
14
connected by a rectangular funnel
15
. The funnel
15
has an internal conductive coating (not shown) that extends from an anode button
16
to the neck
14
. The panel
12
comprises a viewing faceplate
18
and a peripheral flange or sidewall
20
, which is sealed to the funnel
15
by a glass frit
17
. A three-color phosphor screen
22
is carried by the inner surface of the faceplate
18
. The screen
22
is a line screen, with the phosphor lines arranged in triads, each triad including a phosphor line of each of the three colors. A multi-apertured color selection electrode or shadow mask
24
is removably mounted, by conventional means, in predetermined spaced relation to the screen
22
. An electron gun
26
, shown schematically by dashed lines in
FIG. 1
, is centrally mounted within the neck
14
to generate and direct three electron beams
28
along convergent paths through the mask
24
to the screen
22
.
The tube of
FIG. 1
is designed to be used with an external magnetic deflection yoke, such as the yoke
30
shown in the neighborhood of the funnel-to-neck junction. When activated, the yoke
30
subjects the three beams
28
to magnetic fields which cause the beams to scan horizontally and vertically in a rectangular raster over the screen
22
. The initial plane of deflection (at zero deflection) is at about the middle of the yoke
30
. Because of fringe fields, the zone of deflection of the tube extends axially from the yoke
30
into the region of the gun
26
. For simplicity, the actual curvatures of the deflected beam paths in the deflection zone are not shown in FIG.
1
.
The shadow mask
24
is part of a mask-frame assembly
32
that also includes a peripheral frame
34
. The mask-frame assembly
32
is shown positioned within the faceplate panel
12
in
FIG. 1
, and in front view in FIG.
2
. The shadow mask
24
includes a curved apertured portion
25
, an imperforate edge portion
27
surrounding the apertured portion
25
, and a skirt portion
29
bent back from the edge portion
27
and extending away from the screen
22
. The mask
24
is telescoped within the frame
34
, and the skirt portion
29
is welded to the frame
34
.
As shown in
FIG. 2
, the mask
24
has a major axis X, which passes through the center of the mask and parallels the long sides thereof, and a minor axis Y, which passes through the center of the mask and parallels the short sides thereof. As shown in
FIG. 3
, the mask
24
includes an aperture array
35
of slit-shaped apertures
36
aligned in columns
37
that essentially parallel the minor axis Y. Adjacent apertures
36
in each column are separated by tie bars
38
in the mask, with the spacing between centers of adjacent tie bars
38
in a column being defined as the tie bar pitch or vertical pitch a
V
at a particular location on the mask.
In a preferred embodiment, the column-to-column spacing parallel to the major axis X, or horizontal pitch a
H
, includes a “pseudo-cyclic variation” from the center of the mask to each of the two short sides of the mask. A pseudo-cyclic variation is a variation which may deviate slightly from a true cyclic variation in a random fashion. A complete cycle includes a particular spacing pattern. In a preferred embodiment, such complete cycle within the pseudo-cyclic variation occurs in the column-to-column spacing between no more than nine consecutive columns. The following five embodiments provide examples of implementations of the present invention. In each of the embodiments, p is the average column-to-column spacing parallel to the major axis within a designated area, and x is less than 20% of p. For values of x over 20%, the screen line spacing variation would be too noticeable. In a first embodiment, the pseudo-cyclic variation of the column-to-column spacing or horizontal pitch a
H
follows the pattern: p, p−x, p, p+x, p, p−x, p, p+x, p etc. In a second embodiment, the pseudo-cyclic variation of the column-to-column spacing follows the pattern: p, p−x, p, p+x, p. In a fourth embodiment the pseudo-cyclic variation of the column-to-column spacing follows the pattern: p−x, p+x, p−x, p+x, p−x, p+x, etc. In a fifth embodiment, the pseudo-cyclic variation of the column-to-column spacing follows the pattern: p, p, p+x, p+x, p, p, p−x, p−x, p, p, p+x, p+x, p, p, p−x, p−x, p, p, etc. In all of the above embodiments, the pseudo-cyclic variations extend over at least a portion of the mask between the center and each of the short sides of the mask. Preferably, the pseudo-cyclic variation extends from the center to each of the short sides of the mask. The x value in the equations can be a randomly distributed variable, between two limit values, that is changed every cycle; or x may be kept constant over the entire shadow mask.
The technique of varying aperture column spacing distributes screen pixels randomly in the horizontal direction, thus spreading out the aliasing spectral energy. The spread of the aliasing spectral energy decreases the amount of aliasing artifacts that can be discernible by the human eye. It has been found that a difference of 14% in the foregoing equations yields an aliasing improvement of approximately 50%.
Claims
- 1. In a color picture tube having a shadow mask mounted therein in spaced relation to a viewing screen thereof, said mask having a rectangular periphery with two long sides and two short sides, a major axis thereof passing through the center of said mask and paralleling said long sides and a minor axis thereof passing through the center of said mask and paralleling said short sides, and said mask having an aperture array including slit-shaped apertures aligned in columns that essentially parallel said minor axis, the improvement comprisingthe column-to-column spacing parallel to said major axis including a pseudo-cyclic variation at least in a portion of said mask, wherein a complete cycle within said pseudo-cyclic variation occurs in the column-to-column spacing between no more than nine consecutive columns.
- 2. The tube as defined in claim 1, wherein the pseudo-cyclic variation of said column-to-column spacing follows the pattern: p, p−x, p, p+x, p, p−x, p, p+x, p etc., where p is the average column-to-column spacing parallel to the major axis within a designated area, and x is less than 20% of p.
- 3. The tube as defined in claim 2, wherein x is a random distributed variable, between two limit values, that changes every cycle.
- 4. The tube as defined in claim 2, wherein x remains constant over the entire shadow mask.
- 5. The tube as defined in claim 1, wherein the pseudo-cyclic variation of said column-to-column spacing follows the pattern: p, p−x, p, p+x, p, where p is the average column-to-column spacing parallel to the major axis within a designated area, and x is less than 20% of p.
- 6. The tube as defined in claim 5, wherein x is a randomly distributed variable, between two limit values, that changes every cycle.
- 7. The tube as defined in claim 5, wherein x remains constant over the entire shadow mask.
- 8. The tube as defined in claim 1, wherein the pseudo-cyclic variation of said column-to-column spacing follows the pattern: p−x, p+x, p−x, p+x, p−x, p+x, etc., where p is the average column-to-column spacing parallel to the major axis within a designated area, and x is less than 20% of p.
- 9. The tube as defined in claim 8, wherein x is a random distributed variable, between two limit values, that changes every cycle.
- 10. The tube as defined in claim 8, wherein x remains constant over the entire shadow mask.
- 11. The tube as defined in claim 1, wherein the pseudo-cyclic variation of said column-to-column spacing follows the pattern: p, p, p+x, p+x, p, p, p−x, p−x, p, p, p+x, p+x, p, p, p−x, p−x, p, p, etc., where p is the average column-to-column spacing parallel to the major axis within a designated area, and x is less than 20% of p.
- 12. The tube as defined in claim 11, wherein x is a randomly distributed variable, between two limit values, that changes every cycle.
- 13. The tube as defined in claim 11, wherein x remains constant over the entire shadow mask.
- 14. In a color picture tube having a shadow mask mounted therein in spaced relation to a viewing screen thereof, said mask having a rectangular periphery with two long sides and two short sides, a major axis thereof passing through the center of said mask and paralleling said long sides and a minor axis thereof passing through the center of said mask and paralleling said short sides, and said mask having an aperture array including slit-shaped apertures aligned in columns that essentially parallel said minor axis, the improvement comprisingthe column-to-column spacing parallel to said major axis including a pseudo-cyclic variation from the center of said mask to each of the two short sides of said mask, wherein a complete cycle within said pseudo-cyclic variation occurs in the column-to-column spacing between no more than nine consecutive columns.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
MI98A-000571 |
Mar 1998 |
IT |
|
US Referenced Citations (13)