Full text: International cooperation and technology transfer

114 
SOME ASPECTS OF CARTOGRAPHIC VISUALISATION OF THE SCREEN 
- MUTUAL RELATION OF SCAN PIXELS ANS SCREEN PIXELS 
Dr.sc. Brankica Malic 
Civil engineering Faculty of University J.J. Strossmayer 
Osijek, Croatia 
KEY WORDS: scan pixel, screen pixel, hardware zoom, transformation matrix 
ABSTRACT: 
This paper analyses the raster graphics on two types of Cathode Ray Tube (CRT) screens with shadow mask and with 
tension mask, regarding hardware zoom (pixel replication zoom). 
The results can be generalized through mathematical description of the transformation of scan pixel to screen pixel 
matrix. 
KURZFASSUNG: 
Dieser Artikel analysiert Rastergraphiken an zwei Typen des Kathodenstrahl-Bildschirms, am Streifenmasken- und 
Lochmasken-Bildschirm, durch die Anwendung eines reinen Hardware-Zooms, sog. „pixel replication zoom“. 
Diese Erkenntnisse werden durch die mathematische Beschreibung der Abbildung einer Bildmatrix in die 
Bildschirmpixelmatrix verallgemeinert. 
1. INTRODUKTION 
Computer graphics are classified as two types, as raster 
graphics and as vector graphics. Raster graphics, which 
are, for example, acquired through the scanning of the 
maps, are made up of individual dots of the image, the so- 
called pixels arranged in the raster form. Vector graphics 
are made up of dots, i.e., of a sequence of coordinates 
which are then, through mathematical formulae, 
connected to form lines, curves or surfaces. This paper 
will discuss the relation between scan pixels and screen 
pixels within raster graphics. 
2. THE FORM AND THE SIZE OF SCREEN PIXELS 
IN CRT SCREENS 
The construction of CRT (Cathode Ray Tube) computer 
screens, both with shadow mask (with “delta” electron gun 
arrangement) and with tension mask (with “in-line” 
electron gun arrangement) depends on the selected 
screen resolution. Screen resolution is the most important 
feature of image quality: the lower the resolution, the 
coarser the image. Since the screen image is made up of 
many individual screen dots, the so-called screen pixels, 
which are arranged in columns and in rows, the resolution 
is declared as columns x rows. Common resolutions are 
640 x 480; 800 x 600; ...; 1600 x 1200. 
Each screen pixel on a color screen is made up of three 
phosphorus dots glowing in red, green and blue (RGB) 
colors when they are hit with an electron beam. Details on 
the image structure on CRT screens can be found in 
professional literature (Foley, 1994, Lang, 1995, Moers, 
1996). The form and the size of a screen pixel depend on 
the type of the screen (CRT with shadow mask or CRT 
with tension mask), on screen size and on selected 
resolution. Rectangular screen pixels are found in screens 
with tension masks, whereas the screens with shadow 
mask have triangular screen pixels, which always have 
the same, constant dimensions, regardless of the selected 
resolution (see Figure 1). 
7 
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Figure 1: Formation of screen pixels in screens with a 
tension mask and in 17”- screens with a shadow mask. 
With the tension mask screens the dimension of the 
electron beam changes depending on the selected 
resolution. Here the width of the electron beam is constant 
due to the construction of the mask (so-called aperture 
grill pitch) and the phosphorus stripes, and only the 
vertical stretching of the electron beam changes. Thus the 
height of the screen pixel is changed as well (marked with 
b in the table 2), whereas the width of the screen pixel 
remains constant (marked with a in the table 2). The 
measured sizes of screen pixels in 15” and 20” screens 
with tension masks are contained in table 2 (Malic, 1998). 
Due to the change in the vertical stretching of the electron 
beam in screens with tension masks, there is a change in 
the length of the way that the electron beam must pass, 
depending on the resolution selected. At the resolution of 
640 x 480, the electron beam, with maximum height, must 
pass only through 480 rows to fully form the screen 
image. To achieve the same effect with the resolution of 
1280 x 1024, the electron beam must pass through 1024 
rows.
	        
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