Figure 5a Color Modes Spectra
Figure 5b Reading Mode Spectra |
LCD Displays have Backlights consisting of White LEDs, which are made by using a Blue LED together with a Yellow phosphor to transform some of the light for the Red and Green primaries. The spectrum of an LCD display is just the spectrum of its White LED Backlight filtered through the individual Red, Green and Blue sub-pixel color filters within the LCD panel, resulting in broad rolling spectra for LCDs. The difference in the relative heights of the Green and Red Primary peaks for the user selectable Vivid Color Mode and sRGB and DCI-P3 Original Color Modes in Figure 5a below is due to their different White Point Color Temperatures, which requires different drive levels for each Primary Color. The Vivid Color Mode has a slightly Bluish White Point, so it has reduced Green and Red drive levels.
The Reading Mode is designed to change the color balance of the display in order to reduce the amount of Blue Light produced by the display, which some recent research indicates can affect how well users sleep afterwards. As the user adjustable Color Temperature slider setting is increased, the on-screen images take on an increasingly yellowish tint because amount of Blue Light emitted by the display decreases, which is seen in Figure 5b below. With the Reading Mode turned On and at its Warmest setting, the Blue Light from the Redmi Note11T Pro+ is reduced by 55 percent. Turning down the Display Brightness will further decrease the amount of Blue Light. In a separate article we provide an in-depth scientific analysis on the issues affecting Watching Displays at Night and their associated light spectra. At the Middle setting the White Color Temperature decreases to 4,990 K, and at the Maximum setting it decreases to 3,760 K, the Color Temperature of traditional incandescent lighting, which is yellowish.
|