The present invention relates to a color picture display device comprising a cathode ray tube (CRT) having means for generating at least two electron beams. Further, the invention relates to a method for operation of such a color picture display device.
Different types of cathode-ray-tubes (CRT) are known in the art. The most common type of CRT uses a so-called shadow mask for controlling the landing of the electron beams on the phosphors on the screen.
The CRTs normally use several beams that jointly scan successive lines of the display screen. In most cases three beams are used for display of the three basic colors (R, G, B), each beam landing via holes in the shadow mask on respective red, green and blue phosphors present in the display screen.
Many attempts have been made to improve the resolution and image quality in CRTs. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 4,322,750 discloses the use of motion-dependent line interpolation, U.S. Pat. No. 4,602,273 discloses the use of a progressively scanned line interlace and U.S. Pat. No. 5,260,786 discloses sequentially line interlaced scanning.
However, a reduction in spot sizes for high sharpness CRTs causes, the line structure to become more visible, especially with interlaced scanning. Thus, there is still a need for resolution enhancement in CRTs, and especially in the frame direction for the CRT. The frame direction is the direction perpendicular to the direction in which the lines are scanned on the screen. Particularly, there is a need for resolution enhancement in CRTs in which the phosphors for the three colors are deposited as sequential stripes in the line or frame direction on the screen. Further, several of the known methods for image enhancement are relatively costly and difficult to use in practice.
In the early days of television, there were some attempts with color television displays using beams slightly shifted in the frame direction during a sweep in the line direction. Such a solution is presented in, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 2,706,216. However, this known solution focused on other types of problems than the present invention, and, at that time, the requirements on CRT displays were much different from today's requirements. Further, the known solutions of this type are only usable for small display sizes. With larger sizes, the separate color stripes will be visible, which deteriorates the picture quality.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a color picture display device, and a method for operation of same, enabling an enhanced image quality to be obtained. The invention is defined by the independent claims. The dependent claims define advantageous embodiments.
The inventive device may be a CRT with a shadow mask and phosphor strips in the frame direction, wherein each of the electron beams scans its corresponding phosphor strips, while their landing points are shifted with respect to each other in the frame direction, and interpolation is preformed of the color component data for driving the respective beams in order to provide the color component data corresponding with the shift in frame direction. However, the invention may likewise be used for CRTs with phosphor strips arranged in other ways, such as in the line direction, or in other types of groupings, such as CRTs with dotted shadow masks, e.g. described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,491,863.
The inventive device may also be a CRT without a shadow mask, such as a tracking picture tube.
With the present invention, the image quality and resolution in a CRT could be greatly enhanced at moderate cost.
The basic idea is to distribute the color lines as equidistantly as possible over the fields of an image, in such a way that the color lines of the even and the odd fields are interleaved. The means for diverging the landing points may be a quadrupole mounted on the neck of the cathode ray tube. The color beams may be diverged flexibly, and the beam spots may overlap each other and scanning patterns both for interlaced and progressive scanning may be enhanced. The proposed scanning patterns result in an enhancement in line structure for both still and moving images. The newly introduced patterns behave to a certain degree as a progressive scan pattern, so that both line crawl and detail flicker are reduced.
In an embodiment the color video data used to control the beam intensity is interpolated in order to reduce or compensate for the shift of the landing points of the beams. This may be accomplished in that the video signal is de-interlaced, and after that, interpolations between frames are performed to compensate for the shift with respect to the original scan line positions. The de-interlacing would normally be de-interlacing from fields to frames, and in the interpolation of individual color signals a poly-phase filter could be used to eliminate phase errors caused by the shift of the beams. Alternatively, a memory to store only one or a few lines of the video signal may be used. The data of the stored lines are then used for the interpolations.
In a preferred embodiment, the phosphor deposits for each color are arranged along essentially parallel lines in a deposit direction, which is different from the scanning direction, wherein the means for diverging the landing points on the screen diverges the beams in the deposit direction. Preferably, the scanning direction and the deposit direction are substantially perpendicular.
The display device may comprise means for generating at least three beams, in which case, in the direction other than the scanning direction, the landing points on the screen for at least two of the beams converge. For still pictures, the perceived resolution then is very good. If on an average, the brightness of the two converging colors roughly sum up to the brightness of the non-converged color, this way of scanning is perceived by the human visual transfer system as a progressive scanning pattern. A favorable property of progressive scanning is that moving objects are not sensitive to line crawl. Another advantage of this scanning scheme is that for a white horizontal line, the amplitude of the luminance is distributed over the fields in the frame, so the luminance of this line is generated at the field rate, which is higher than the frame rate. This results in reduced detail flicker compared to a normal interlaced pattern.
The invention may be applied to a display device operating in an interlaced manner. In this way, the frame rate is doubled compared to progressive scanning, while the line frequency and the video bandwidth are kept constant. A higher frame rate is advantageous for visual perception, since the human eye is more sensitive to large area flicker than to detail flicker. Interlaced scanning reduces large area flicker, at the expense of increased detail flicker. The invention may also be applied to a display device operating in a progressive manner.
Many different types of interpolation means are feasible. E.g. a filter could be arranged for interpolation of the color component data for driving one of the beams. Alternatively, digital interpolation means may be used comprising a line or frame memory.
These and other aspects of the invention will be apparent from and elucidated with reference to the embodiments described hereinafter.
In the drawings:
a and 13b are cross sections in the vertical pane of
With reference to
The phosphor lines are preferably arranged as stripes in the frame direction on the screen. Other arrangements, such as stripes in a line direction, or in other words in a line scanning direction are possible as well.
In a traditional color CRT with an in-line electron gun, the electron beams for the primary colors red, green and blue land on the same line of the screen, as is illustrated in
One of the trends in CRT design is to increase the display resolution. Therefore, the spot size (the cross-section of the electron beams on the screen) must be reduced. In doing so, the line scan structure becomes more visible both for interleaved and progressive pictures. With interlaced scanning also the so-called line crawl artifact becomes more dominant. The line crawl typically occurs in image areas without detail (further referred to as flat areas). When the viewer tracks an object at a vertical odd speed, the line structure becomes visible because the lines of two subsequent fields are seen at the same position (not ‘interlaced’). This means that a flat area is no longer perceived as flat, but can be seen to consist of discrete lines. The line crawl is also visible if there is no motion in the image (e.g. in a fill white image), because the viewer can still track at a vertical odd speed over the screen. This is possible because at those speeds the line structure becomes visible. The lines seem to ‘crawl’ up or down. The line crawl causes an interlaced display to have restlessness, because any sudden eye movements cause the line structure to appear. The artifact is worst at critical velocities in frame direction of an odd number of frame lines per field, causing halving of the perceived line resolution. The frame direction is the direction perpendicular to the line scanning direction on the screen. In the embodiment of
In a first embodiment using an interlaced scan pattern, as shown in
The landing points R and B are in this embodiment shifted by +2/3 and −2/3 of the height of a frame line Δy with respect to the landing point G for the green beam. Accordingly, for still pictures the perceived distance between two neighboring lines is reduced to Δy/3, and to 2Δy/3 for objects moving at a critical velocity of odd multiples of 1/3 frame line per field. For correct picture portrayal, the color component data for controlling the red and green beam are preferably calculated for the new positions. In the embodiment of
In a second embodiment, illustrated in
In a third embodiment, as is illustrated in
In a fourth embodiment, shown in
The idea underlying the present invention is also applicable to shadow mask CRTs in which the image is scanned progressively, and therefore two embodiments using progressive scanning will be discussed in the following, with reference to
In
In the table below, properties of the interlaced and progressive scanning patterns with shifted scan line positions of R and B are gathered for comparison:
The critical velocities at which visibility of line crawl is at a maximum are different for the various embodiments as shown in the table above. In a system supporting variations of the landing point at video frequency, beam shifts could be changed in dependence on the amount of motion in the frame direction present locally in the video image, in such a way that line crawl is minimized.
Preferably the color picture display device should further comprise means for interpolation of color video data used to control the beam intensity. By means of interpolation the video data may be calculated corresponding to the shifted landing points R, G, B. An embodiment of such interpolation means, especially suited for use with shadow mask CRTs, is illustrated in
The operation of the interpolation means in this embodiment is as follows. In a first step, the video signal Vi is de-interlaced in a first unit G1 from field to complete frames. In a second step (if the color in question is not shown at an integer frame line position) the individual color signals are interpolated and estimated from this progressive video signal using a poly-phase filter to eliminate the phase error between the video lines and the scan lines in the screen. In this step, the signals are preferably processed in parallel. For example, the primary red, green and blue color video signals could be processed in separate phase shift interpolators G2-G4, and finally supplied to the picture tube G5 for generating subsequent images.
The embodiment presented above is based on de-interlacing on frame basis. In a low-end TV-system e.g. a system based on a 50 Hz interlaced CRT, frame memories may be too expensive. A cheaper solution is to use memories for only one or a few lines of the colors that are shifted to different positions. The minimum amount of storage capacity for a shifted color is one line memory per beam if only shifts in the direction of the previous video line are allowed. It is to be noted that backward interpolation can be applied, using only information about a current line and one or more previous lines, to all the scanning patterns of
In
The means for diverging landing points R, G, B on the screen 2 may comprise a magnetic quadrupole 4 to split a common scan line of, for example, a red, green and blue electron beam on the screen into three separate lines, with the magnetic poles of the quadrupole 4 being arranged as shown in
In practice, the most convenient position for the quadrupole 4 is in between the gun 1 and the deflection unit 3, as shown in
This leads to the following artefact: Suppose that the quadrupole 4 generates a predetermined vertical spacing between the landing points R, G, B of the red, the green, and the blue beams, in the center of the screen 2 where the deflection unit 3 is off and hence the action of the lens 3′ is zero. Then, upon deflecting the beams, the deflection unit 3 will act as a lens and the vertical spacing between the landing points R, G, B of the beams will be reduced. So, a quadrupole 4 positioned in between the gun 1 and the deflection unit 3 will not suffice to split a scan line into three parallel scan lines for the red, green, and blue beams. There are several remedies for this problem:
The currents through the quadrupole and the rotation coil may be static currents (i.e. they vary as a function of time). Therefore, the quadrupole may also comprise permanent magnets.
Specific embodiments of the invention have now been described. However, several alternatives are possible, as will be apparent to someone skilled in the art. For example, different scanning schemes for the scanning path are possible. Still further, the implementation of the control method could be accomplished in different ways, for example in specially dedicated hardware or in software for control of already existing control means.
Further embodiments are described in EP application number 02078782.6 filed on 13 Sep. 2002, the priority of which is claimed herein.
In the description of the preferred embodiments above, reference has been made to specific colors. However, it will be appreciated by someone skilled in the art that in all the embodiments the primary colors are mutually interchangeable in order. Still further, it would be possible to use other colors instead of the proposed ones. Still further, the invention could also make use of a different number of color generating beams, such as only two independent beams, or four or more beams.
It should further be understood that the discussed directions merely serve as examples, and e.g. the phosphor depositions may be arranged in either the vertical or horizontal direction, or any suitable direction in between. The same applies to the scanning direction. Usually, a video line is scanned in the horizontal direction, the subsequent lines being scanned from a first line to a last line in the vertical direction. However, for the scanning patterns proposed in this invention, the physical scanning direction can be chosen arbitrarily.
Such and other obvious modifications must be considered to be within the scope of the present invention, as it is defined by the appended claims. It should be noted that the above-mentioned embodiments illustrate rather than limit the invention, and that those skilled in the art will be able to design many alternative embodiments without departing from the scope of the appended claims. In the claims, any reference signs placed between parentheses shall not be construed as limiting the claim. The word “comprising” does not exclude the presence of elements or steps other than those listed in the claim. The word “a” or “an” preceding an element does not exclude the presence of a plurality of such elements. Further, a single unit may perform the functions of several means recited in the claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0207872.6 | Sep 2002 | EP | regional |
02080174.2 | Dec 2002 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB03/03904 | 9/5/2003 | WO | 3/8/2005 |