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Bit Depth

Bit depth refers to a scanner's ability to reproduce color or shades of gray. A 1-bit scanner can only scan in black and white, while an 8-bit scanner can scan 256 shades of gray. For color, a 24-bit scanner uses three 8-bit channels to scan over 16 million colors by capturing 256 shades each of red, green, and blue. Higher bit depths like 30-bit or 36-bit can capture more colors by using more shades per channel. In general, higher bit depths allow scanners to be more accurate and precise in analyzing and reproducing tones and colors.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
22 views

Bit Depth

Bit depth refers to a scanner's ability to reproduce color or shades of gray. A 1-bit scanner can only scan in black and white, while an 8-bit scanner can scan 256 shades of gray. For color, a 24-bit scanner uses three 8-bit channels to scan over 16 million colors by capturing 256 shades each of red, green, and blue. Higher bit depths like 30-bit or 36-bit can capture more colors by using more shades per channel. In general, higher bit depths allow scanners to be more accurate and precise in analyzing and reproducing tones and colors.

Uploaded by

Moji Piyapong
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Bit Depth

Bit Depth is a commonly advertised specification of scanners. It is the scanner's ability to accurately analyze and reproduce the full color spectrum of the scanned information. Let's start off with a black and white scanner: A 1 Bit scanner would simply be black or white, with nothing in between. No shades of gray would be produced, only black or white. ( =2 shades)

1 Bit "Line Art" A 2 bit scanner would only produce four shades of gray ( shades) =4

2 Bit Grayscale A 4 Bit scanner would produce 16 shades of gray. ( shades) =16

4 Bit Grayscale An 8 Bit scanner would produce 256 shades of gray. ( shades) =256

8 Bit Grayscale When applying the same principal to color scanning, you must remember that there are three channels of color (RGB = Red, Green, Blue). Therefore, a 24 Bit scanner is actually three separate color channels of 8 Bits each (256 shades of red, 256 shades of green, 256 shades of blue). The total color range available with a 24 Bit scanner is 16.8 million colors. ( =16,777,216 colors)

A 30 Bit scanner is made up of three 10 Bit color channels (1,024 shades of red, 1,024 shades of green, 1,024 shades of blue). The total color range available with a 30 Bit scanner is 1 billion colors. ( =1,073,741,824 colors) A 36 Bit scanner is made up of three 12 Bit color channels (4,096 shades of red, 4,096 shades of green, 4,096 shades of blue). The total color range available with a 36 Bit scanner is 68.7 billion colors. ( =68,719,476,736 colors)

36 Bit Color

24 Bit Color Notice how the subtle transitions of the flesh tones are lost with this limited color palette The higher the Bit Depth of the scanner, the more accurate and precise it becomes when analyzing available tonal information and reproducing color. Since a scanner with a higher Optical Density obtains more tonal information to analyze and reproduce, it is more precise. Data that was never obtained can not be analyzed and reproduced.

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