vineri, 5 iunie 2009

Tre sa ma cac

Ma duc la baie sa ma cac ca asa ma trece o cacare de nu-i adevarat!

duminică, 31 mai 2009

Vine Sesiunea

Blogu asta ii o prostie

vineri, 22 mai 2009

Codu penal - Pot sa cad

Merge foarte tare melodia daca esti prea relaxat ;)
Ma gandeam in ultimele zile sa imi fac un tatuaj. Am visat ca aveam un tatuaj si era foarte tare. Aveam un tatuaj mare mare pe spate si doua pe ambele antebrate.  Daca ar fi sa imi fac un tatuaj mi-as face unu pe antebrat in partea de jos(sub mana). Dar nu cred ca imi fac cel putin nu prea curand. Sau unu ca asta:

La familia - Zilele Insorite


Postare noua

Aceasta este cred ca prima mea postare de blogar adevarat ce sunt. Blogu asta il scriu in ideea ca nu il citeste nimeni deci va fi mai tampit. Sa incep a va spune ce am facut astazi :
1 m-am sculat
2 m-am pus in pat la loc
3 m-am sculat iarasi
4 m-am pus iarasi in pat
5 ma suna mama ca trebuie sa ma duc dupa masina la autotop
6 m-am sculat de tot
7 ma duc dupa masina la autotop
8 o duc pe mama la galenus
9 mananc un sandwish de la porc
10 vin acasa
11 stau acasa mult si bine
12 ma uit la videoclipuri cu tegan si sara
13 scriu in blog

Morala de azi: "Nu iti face un blog daca nu ai ce spune"

Da de ce nu am ce spune??
Chiar asa de idiot sunt incat sa nu am despre ce vorbi??
No ca m-am enervat. Nu vi s-a intamplat sa nu vi se para viata chiar asa de spectaculoasa precum spun altii ca e? Sa vezi pe alti care se dau mari de cat de fericiti is si tu esti doar plictisit. Probabil ca numa eu am probleme psihice. Dar cel mai rau cand ai o problema e atunci cand te gandesti ca tu esti singurul care o are. De exemplu la scoala daca ma certa diriga ca am chiulit daca mai era cel putin inca unu in situatia mea ma simteam mult mai bine. 
Ce ii foarte trist la blogu asta e ca eu nu stiu sa scriu un blog calumea si cei care o sa il citeasca daca o sa il citeasca cineva nu or sa intaleaga nimic pentru ca sar prea repede de la o idee la alta.

joi, 4 octombrie 2007

How plasma displays work

Introduction to How Plasma Displays Work


For the past 75 years, the vast majority of televisions have been built around the same technology: the cathode ray tube (CRT). In a CRT television, a gun fires a beam of electrons (negatively-charged particles) inside a large glass tube. The electrons excite phosphor atoms along the wide end of the tube (the screen), which causes the phosphor atoms to light up. The television image is produced by lighting up different areas of the phosphor coating with different colors at different intensities (see How Televisions Work for a detailed explanation).
Sony plasma display
Cathode ray tubes produce crisp, vibrant images, but they do have a serious drawback: They are bulky. In order to increase the screen width in a CRT set, you also have to increase the length of the tube (to give the scanning electron gun room to reach all parts of the screen). Consequently, any big-screen CRT television is going to weigh a ton and take up a sizable chunk of a room.

A new alternative has popped up on store shelves: the plasma flat panel display. These televisions have wide screens, comparable to the largest CRT sets, but they are only about 6 inches (15 cm) thick. In this article, we'll see how these sets do so much in such a small space.


If you've read How Television Works, then you understand the basic idea of a standard television or monitor. Based on the information in a video signal, the television lights up thousands of tiny dots (called pixels) with a high-energy beam of electrons. In most systems, there are three pixel colors -- red, green and blue -- which are evenly distributed on the screen. By combining these colors in different proportions, the television can produce the entire color spectrum.

The basic idea of a plasma display is to illuminate tiny, colored fluorescent lights to form an image. Each pixel is made up of three fluorescent lights -- a red light, a green light and a blue light. Just like a CRT television, the plasma display varies the intensities of the different lights to produce a full range of colors.

Tuning In
Many of the first plasma displays on the market weren't technically televisions, because they didn't have TV tuners. The television tuner is the device that takes a television signal (the one coming from a cable wire, for example) and interprets it to create a video image.
Like LCD monitors, these plasma displays were just monitors that display a standard video signal. To watch television on them, you had to hook them up to a separate unit that has its own television tuner, such as a VCR. Today, most of the plasma-screen devices you can buy at electronics stores are TVs and have digital television tuners.

What is Plasma?
The central element in a fluorescent light is a plasma, a gas made up of free-flowing ions (electrically charged atoms) and electrons (negatively charged particles). Under normal conditions, a gas is mainly made up of uncharged particles. That is, the individual gas atoms include equal numbers of protons (positively charged particles in the atom's nucleus) and electrons. The negatively charged electrons perfectly balance the positively charged protons, so the atom has a net charge of zero.
illustration of how atoms emit light



If you introduce many free electrons into the gas by establishing an electrical voltage across it, the situation changes very quickly. The free electrons collide with the atoms, knocking loose other electrons. With a missing electron, an atom loses its balance. It has a net positive charge, making it an ion.

In a plasma with an electrical current running through it, negatively charged particles are rushing toward the positively charged area of the plasma, and positively charged particles are rushing toward the negatively charged area.

In this mad rush, particles are constantly bumping into each other. These collisions excite the gas atoms in the plasma, causing them to release photons of energy. (For details on this process, see How Fluorescent Lamps Work.)

Xenon and neon atoms, the atoms used in plasma screens, release light photons when they are excited. Mostly, these atoms release ultraviolet light photons, which are invisible to the human eye. But ultraviolet photons can be used to excite visible light photons, as we'll see in the next section.

Inside the Display


The xenon and neon gas in a plasma television is contained in hundreds of thousands of tiny cells positioned between two plates of glass. Long electrodes are also sandwiched between the glass plates, on both sides of the cells. The address electrodes sit behind the cells, along the rear glass plate. The transparent display electrodes, which are surrounded by an insulating dielectric material and covered by a magnesium oxide protective layer, are mounted above the cell, along the front glass plate.
the surface discharge in a plasma display
Both sets of electrodes extend across the entire screen. The display electrodes are arranged in horizontal rows along the screen and the address electrodes are arranged in vertical columns. As you can see in the diagram below, the vertical and horizontal electrodes form a basic grid.

To ionize the gas in a particular cell, the plasma display's computer charges the electrodes that intersect at that cell. It does this thousands of times in a small fraction of a second, charging each cell in turn.
When the intersecting electrodes are charged (with a voltage difference between them), an electric current flows through the gas in the cell. As we saw in the last section, the current creates a rapid flow of charged particles, which stimulates the gas atoms to release ultraviolet photons.
The released ultraviolet photons interact with phosphor material coated on the inside wall of the cell. Phosphors are substances that give off light when they are exposed to other light. When an ultraviolet photon hits a phosphor atom in the cell, one of the phosphor's electrons jumps to a higher energy level and the atom heats up. When the electron falls back to its normal level, it releases energy in the form of a visible light photon.

The phosphors in a plasma display give off colored light when they are excited. Every pixel is made up of three separate subpixel cells, each with different colored phosphors. One subpixel has a red light phosphor, one subpixel has a green light phosphor and one subpixel has a blue light phosphor. These colors blend together to create the overall color of the pixel.

basic plasma grid
By varying the pulses of current flowing through the different cells, the control system can increase or decrease the intensity of each subpixel color to create hundreds of different combinations of red, green and blue. In this way, the control system can produce colors across the entire spectrum.
The main advantage of plasma display technology is that you can produce a very wide screen using extremely thin materials. And because each pixel is lit individually, the image is very bright and looks good from almost every angle. The image quality isn't quite up to the standards of the best cathode ray tube sets, but it certainly meets most people's expectations.
The biggest drawback of this technology has been the price. However, falling prices and advances in technology mean that the plasma display may soon edge out the old CRT sets.
To learn more about plasma displays, as well as other television technologies, check out the links on the next page.