
By A.I. Mal'cev
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13 Geometry of illumination and of light collection in a glossmeter. 1 Plot of spectral reflectance of optimal colours as defined by Schrödinger. 2 Qualitative comparison between spectral reflectances of optimal colours with different purity and lightness (lightness increases and purity decreases with the extension of reflectance equal to 1) and of an actual colour with equal hue. The description and the names are given in the chapter. (c) MacAdam limit and Pointer’s gamut of ink colours related to the illuminant C and to a percentage luminance factor Y = 20 represented on the CIE 1931 chromaticity diagram.
11 Colour matching functions of the CIE 1931 observer in the monitor RGB reference frame. 12 Colour matching functions of the CIE 1931 observer in the SRSGSB reference frame. 13 Relative spectral sensitivity function of a typical commercial camera in its fundamental reference frame. (c) The six possible cases in which the pixels have maximum overlapping of the inks inside them then produce only four colours. 15 Spectral reflectance of optimal colour inks of cyan, yellow and magenta, and their overlapping if the pixel is completely coated.
1–3 This book is about colorimetry and has the definitions of colour and colorimetry as its starting point. Between these two meanings there is a correspondence and colorimetry quantitatively describes this correspondence. Humans evoke the perceived colour in the interlocutors with conventional words – red, yellow, green, blue, black, grey, white, so on –. 1. ”5 2. Prceived colour – attribute of visual perception that can be described by colour names such as white, grey, black, yellow, brown, vivid red, deep reddish purple, or by combinations of such names.