- Penetron
The Penetron is a
cathode ray tube with a voltage-sensitive screen that displays variable colors on layers ofphosphor s based on a beam penetration mechanism.Penetron screens were commercially manufactured from late 1960s until mid- 1980s for
avionics andradar application due to their higher resolution compared to conventional CRTs. [cite book
last = Morton
first = David | last2 = Morton, Jr. | first2 = David L. | last3 = Gabriel |first3 = Joseph
title = Electronics: The Life Story of a Technology
publisher = Johns Hopkins University Press
date = 2007
location =
pages = 87
url = http://books.google.com/books?id=rABggQmp31MC&pg=PA87&dq=Penetron+cathode+ray+tube&ei=qua2SKbZDILoyATuyv3kDA&sig=ACfU3U04G9uMioZ4019kix7I0V59xCu_5g
isbn = 9780801887734 ] Widely used CRT screens have two major features limiting the resolution: first, the spot size is limited by theshadow mask ; second, each colorpixel occupies the area three times larger than the area required for single color phosphor dot. In the penetron cathodoluminescent screen (CLS) different colors are displayed within the same area of the screen. Due to this fact, and also thanks to the absence of the shadow-mask the resolution of the Penetron screens inherently is limited only by the beam spot and, to a lesser degree, by phosphor grain size.The conventional penetron screens consisted of two different layers made of transparent phosphors separated by a
dielectric barrier layer. At low accelerating voltages, the electron beam is totally absorbed in a phosphor layer closest to theelectron gun thus producing one output color, normally the red signal, while at higher voltages the beam penetrates through the first phosphor layer and excites the second (green) layer closest to the viewer. Intervening colors, (yellow or orange) are produced at intermediate acceleration voltages. Most penetron CRTs have layers of red and green phosphors on the interior of the faceplate providing simpler and higher resolution displays than color-mask tubes, but they cannot produce shades of blue. [cite book
last = Stevens
first = Roger T. (editor)
title = Computer graphics dictionary
publisher = Charles River Media/Cengage Delmar Learning
date = 2002
location =
pages = 331
url = http://books.google.com/books?id=XqlJcMi1Pi0C&pg=PA331&dq=Penetron+cathode+ray+tube&ei=qua2SKbZDILoyATuyv3kDA&sig=ACfU3U2gXQ7LZ9CnJqSUrziNwjRksTajaA
isbn = 9781584500193 ]Although there are technical difficulties extending the penetron approach to a display with a full
color gamut , using multiple layers of color phosphors, the high resolution makes the penetron idea attractive for special applications requiring very high readability and color contrast. Therefore, penetron displays provide the benefit of smooth continuous lines without any color fringing, but also the drawback of increasedelectronic circuit complexity. [cite book
last = Creasey
first = David J. (editor)
title = Advanced Signal Processing
publisher = Institution of Electrical Engineers (IEE)
date = 1985
pages = 154-155
url = http://books.google.com/books?id=iszN4Ohe1b0C&pg=PA154&dq=Penetron+cathode+ray+tube&ei=qua2SKbZDILoyATuyv3kDA&sig=ACfU3U2-uXJQQ8tV-6WKr0AH84WVx4KmOA#PPA158,M1
isbn = 9780863410376 ]References
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