CRT Display: Prepared By: Hinal Lunagariya
CRT Display: Prepared By: Hinal Lunagariya
The earliest version of the CRT was known as the "Braun tube",
invented by the German physicist Ferdinand Braun in 1897.
Monochrome
Grayscale
Color
Monochrome Monitor
A monochrome monitor is a type
of CRT computer display which was
very common in the early days of
computing.
Color Monitors works like a monochrome one, except that there are three
electron beams instead of one.
The three guns represent additive colors (red, green and blue) although the
beam they emit are colorless.
Each pixel includes three phosphors, red, green and blue, arranged in a
triangle.
When the beam of each of these guns are combined and focused on a
pixel, the phosphors light up.
Color Monitors
The monitors can display different colors by combining various intensities
of three beams.
Color CRTs are much more complicated. It requires manufacturing very
precise geometry.
Mixing of Colors
It Consists of..
directed toward a point on the screen by the magnetic field generated by the
deflection coils
Because the electrons are negatively charged, they are repelled away from the
cathode, and move across the tube to the anode.
The ray can be affected by a magnet because of its relation to positive and
negative charges.
A CRT monitor contains millions of tiny red, green, and blue phosphor dots that
glow when struck by an electron beam. Electron beam travels across the screen to
create a visible image.
The Cathode Ray Tube monitors have lower price rate than the LCD
display or Plasma display.
The contrast features of the cathode ray tube monitor are considered
highly excellent.
Cons of CRT
They have a big back and take up space on desk.
CRTs emit a small amount of X-ray band radiation which can result in a
health hazard.
CRTs operate at very high voltage which can overheat system or result in an
implosion.
Within a CRT a strong vacuum exists in it and can also result in a implosion.