The 1976 CIE Chromaticity Diagram


Image courtesy of Photo Research, Inc.

When the description "CIE Chromaticity Diagram" is used, it typically refers to the standard diagram established in 1931. Two revisions have been made since then - one in 1960 and one in 1976. All three contain the same information, just scaled differently. Conceptually, the big advantage attributed to the 1976 diagram is that the distance between points on the diagram is approximately proportional to the perceived color difference.

The CIE system characterizes colors by a luminance parameter Y and two color coordinates x and y which specify the point on the chromaticity diagram.

Blackbody curve on the CIE Diagram
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Blackbody Curve on CIE Diagram


Image courtesy of Photo Research, Inc.

Shown above is an enlarged section of the 1976 CIE Chromaticity Diagram to show the path of a blackbody radiator that is caused to increase in temperature. As a heated object becomes incandescent, it first glows red, then yellow, white, and finally blue. This occurs because the wavelength associated with the peak radiation of the blackbody radiator becomes progressivley shorter with increased temperature, as described in the Wien Displacement Law. As you might know by looking at the colors of stars, these colors are highly unsaturated. That is, within a certain temperature range, say 4000 to 20000 K, they are very close to white. Much effort has gone into producing white light, and several standard illuminants have been used as a standard for white light for specific purposes like photography. Some of the standard illuminants have been given letter designations like A, B, C, D. As you can see on the diagram, they fall close to the line traced out by a blackbody radiator with changing temperature. One of the parameters used to characterize these light sources is their "color temperature", the temperature associated with the nearest point on the blackbody curve.

Index

CIE concepts

Color measurement concepts
 
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