plasma videod display
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In a plasma display, each tiny fluorescent light contains a pocket of gas that is turned into plasma when an electric current is applied. This plasma emits ultraviolet light, which then causes the phosphor coating on the screen to emit visible light, creating the colored pixel on the display.
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Plasma is used in technology for applications such as plasma TVs for display screens, plasma cutting for precise metal cutting, and plasma processing for semiconductor manufacturing.
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It will display the picture, but it will not display the full HD resolution and the image may appear distorted
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The answer is Panaplex display
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A plasma display panel is a flat panel display common to large TV displays 30 inches plus. They are called "plasma" because the technology uses small cells containing electrically charged gases or more commonly known as fluorescent lamps.
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The largest Panasonic plasma panel is 152-inches with Full HD 3D plasma display. The complimentary warranty period is twelve months.
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A plasma display, LCD and LED. It replaces the old Cathode ray tube monitor.
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CRT( cathode ray tube)
LCD ( liquid crystal display)
plasma
touchscreen
OLED (organic light emitting display)
these are some computer display
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LCD stands for "liquid crystal display" and projects the images by liquid crystals. Plasma TVs display images by literally heating up small gas molecules. But plasma TVs can turn a very small enclosed place into what feels like a furnace very quickly.
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Liquid Crystal Display. Not quite as good as Plasma.
helloo
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A plasma display panel uses ions and electrons between two glass plates covered with phosphor to produce an image. The ions and electrons interact to create light, which illuminates the phosphor coating and produces the display.
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Plasma is the most abundant state of matter in the universe and can be found in stars, like the Sun, as well as in lightning, neon signs, and some types of artificial lights. It can also be created in laboratories for various research and technological applications.
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No. PDP is a Plasma Display panel, which is an entirely different technology than LCD or Liquid Crystal Display television.
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Plasma screen TVs differ from LCD or LED TVs. Plasma TVs use electrically charged ionized gas to display the picture. The advantages of a plasma TV are that they provide a clearer and better picture than LCD or LED TVs.
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Wikipedia has a whole page on every single thing you need to know about plasma display. Many people criticize wikipedia for false information but wikipedia has reliable information because it is factual and everything has a reference for proof.
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Plasma display (PDP) can be defined as a type of flat panel display common to large TV displays 30 inches (76 cm) or larger. They are called plasma displays because the technology utilizes small cells containing electrically charged ionized gases, or what are in essence chambers more commonly known as fluorescent lamps.
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Plasma tubes contain ionized gas or plasma, made up of positively and negatively charged particles. These tubes often emit colorful light due to the energy levels of the ions within them. Plasma tubes are commonly used in lighting and display applications.
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Bitzer co-invented the Plasma Display, along with H. Gene Slottow and Robert Willson back in 1964 at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign for the PLATO Computer System. The original plasma display was a bright orange monochrome screen.
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LCD's (liquid crystal display) tend to have a higher resolution, are lighter, and use less power than plasma screens. However, plasma screens allow for better viewing angles.
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If you mean display type, then there are rasterized picture tube televisions, LCD televisions, and plasma televisions.
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flat-panel
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No, plama and liquid crystal are two entirely different forms of visual display technology.
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emissive display * emissive display are device that convert electrical energy into light. * example of emmisive display are plasma panels , thin file electroluminescent display , light emitting diodes etc.. non - emissive display * non-emissive display use opticat effects to convert sunlight or light from some other source into graphics pattern. *example of non-emissive display is liquid crystal device.
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Plasma TVs have excellent contrast and can produce deeper blacks than LCD TVs. Additionally, plasma TVs display more natural colors. They also have a wider viewing angle than LCD TVs.
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PDP stands for Plasma Display Panel - basically a plasma tv. Most electronics stores still sell a few varieties, though LCD and LED are more popular. Target, Best Buy, Walmart, and Amazon.com are your best bets.
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A clamper bag comes with some Plasma,LED,LCD tv's that are 40" or bigger it clamps behind the display and holds all the cords together. Just bought a samsung plasma and it came with this.
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Although most newer Plasma Televisions are HDTVs, many older Plasma sets are not.
In order for a TV to be classified as an HDTV, or HDTV-ready, the television must be able to display at least 1280x720 pixels. Some of those "budget" Plasma televisions priced at $1,000 or less, that are "selling like hotcakes" only display 852x480 or 1024x768 pixels. The images on these sets look great, especially for DVDs and standard digital cable, but it is not true HDTV.
Although if you have a typical HDTV input format of 1080i needs a native display of 1920x1080 pixels for a one-to-one point display of the HDTV image. So HD capability is not limited to 1280x720. Capability is from that range and higher to insure the purest quality of HD.
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In 1997, Fujitsu introduced the first 42-inch (107 cm) plasma display; it had 852x480 resolution and was progressively scanned. Also in 1997, Phillips introduced a 42-inch (107 cm) display, with 852x480 resolution. It was the only plasma to be displayed to the retail public in 4 Sears locations in the US. The price was US$14,999 and included in-home installation. Later in 1997, Pioneer started selling their first plasma television to the public, and others followed.
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The type of display interface (VGA, DVI, HDMI, DisplayPort) and the display technology (CRT, LCD, plasma, LED, OLED) affects display resolution, response time, color quality, and refresh rate.
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Yes, a plasma is a gas with an electrical charge.
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XRGB is a family of videoprocessors used for playing 240p video games on an LCD, Plasma or any other progressive display device.
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Plasma display (PDP) can be defined as a type of flat panel display common to large TV displays 30 inches (76 cm) or larger. They are called plasma displays because the technology utilizes small cells containing electrically charged ionized gases, or what are in essence chambers more commonly known as fluorescent lamps.
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lcd stands for Liqud crystal display and unlike plasma the screen does not burn out and does not over heat except for that the quality is the same
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There are 3 major screen types. Plasma, LCD, and LED. right now LCD's are the best
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Plasma HDTVs can still display blacks more accurately than LCDs can, which means better detail in dark scenes. Plasmas offering a higher end range of screen sizes. Plasmas tend to be cheaper as well.
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The temperature of an inductively coupled plasma (ICP) can be measured using a thermocouple that is inserted into the plasma torch or near the plasma. The thermocouple converts the temperature into an electrical signal that can be read by a temperature display unit or data system. Additionally, infrared thermometers or thermal imaging cameras can also be used to measure the temperature of the ICP non-invasively.
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The pixels of a plasma screen are made up of a gases (xenon, neon and helium) between two panels. These gases glow to different colours when a voltage is passed across them (they are accelerated towards the screen and light is produced when they hit the screen)
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This is one of the wilder myths about Plasma TV! A tiny amount of UV radiation comes out of a Plasma display (you can measure it up to one inch from the screen).
The tube television you put your nose on while you watched cartoons in the seventies form an image by shooting radiation at the screen! Radiation from a tube TV floods more than one foot into the room! You probably have several of these TVs in your house right now!
You can read more myths about plasma tv's here: http://www.buzzle.com/articles/10-biggest-myths-lies-about-plasma-tv.html
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As we see from the question category, plasma has more than one meaning. In physics, it refers to a gas that is heated to the point of ionization. The sun is made of plasma, and fires contain some plasma. Every time a person uses fire, they are also using plasma. There are types of lights that use plasma, and televisions that use these lights to create pictures. And there is also another meaning, which is the blood component other than the blood cells. Plasma has medical uses, to use in transfusions when there is not enough whole blood available of the correct blood type (or when you can't determine the blood type).
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Probably TFT (thin film transistor) for thie display - until plasma technology gets cheap enough to include it as standard.
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The two displays use different technology, have a somewhat different appearance and the better display is largely one of personal preference.
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In plasma TV screens, there are individual gaseous pixels that are turned on and off to display the proper colors. This gives a superior picture initially but can fade over time or cause burn-in. Plasma TVs tend to be bigger than LCD TVs, however the LCDs are closing that gap. Plasma TVs are around 30% less expensive than LCD TVs for the same size screen.
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