Colour and Colour Measurement TX2046 Dr Huw Owens

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Colour and Colour Measurement (TX-2046) Dr Huw Owens © Huw Owens - University of

Colour and Colour Measurement (TX-2046) Dr Huw Owens © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 1

Introduction • • • Aims and Objectives Syllabus Course structure Colour in an industrial

Introduction • • • Aims and Objectives Syllabus Course structure Colour in an industrial context Reading List and Resources © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 2

Aims • To give an appreciation of the electromagnetic basis of colour • To

Aims • To give an appreciation of the electromagnetic basis of colour • To provide an understanding of additive and subtractive colour mixing and the related applications • A basic introduction to the Human Visual System (HVS) • An understanding of the different methods of colour specification and colour difference. • A basic knowledge of a range of colour issues faced in industry • An ability to problem solve with respect to specific colour issues • An ability to measure colour using the correct technique © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 3

Syllabus • • • Light and colour Colour mixing Colour vision The CIE system

Syllabus • • • Light and colour Colour mixing Colour vision The CIE system Colour atlases Colour difference Psychology of colour Reflectance Absorption Reflection © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 4

Course Structure • 12 hours of lectures • 24 hours of laboratory work •

Course Structure • 12 hours of lectures • 24 hours of laboratory work • Assessment method and relative weightings • Unseen examination questions - 50% • Assessed Laboratory reports – 50% • Module worth 10 credits © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 5

Reading List and Resources (1) • WYSZECKI, Günter, and W. S. STILES. 1967. Color

Reading List and Resources (1) • WYSZECKI, Günter, and W. S. STILES. 1967. Color science: concepts and methods, quantitative data and formulas (New York: John Wiley & Sons). 2 nd ed. 1982. • HUNT, R. W. G. 1987. Measuring colour (Chichester, England: Ellis Horwood). 2 nd ed. 1991. • HUNT, R. W. G. 1988. The reproduction of colour in photography, printing and television (Tolworth, England: Fountain Press). • WRIGHT, William David. 1944. The measurement of color (London: Adam Hilger). 2 nd ed. (New York: Macmillan, 1958). 3 rd ed. (Princeton, New Jersey: Van Nostrand, 1964). 4 th ed. 1969. © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 6

Reading List and Resources (2) • WANDELL B, 1995, Foundations of Vision, Sinauer Associates.

Reading List and Resources (2) • WANDELL B, 1995, Foundations of Vision, Sinauer Associates. • BOYNTON and Mc. Leod, Colour Vision, Optical Society of America. • Berns RS, 2000, Billmeyer and Saltzman’s Principles of Color Technology, 3 rd Edition, John Wiley & Sons, New York. • MACDONALD R(editor), 1997, Colour Physics for Industry, Society of Dyers and Colorists, Staples printers Rochester Ltd, 0 -901956 -70 -8. • NASSAU K, 2001, The physics and chemistry of colour, The fifteen causes of colour 2 nd Edition, Wiley Series in Pure and Applied optics, John Wiley & Sons, ISBN 0 -471 -39106 -9. © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 7

Reading List and Resources (3) • Internet : • http: //www. cie. co. at/cie/

Reading List and Resources (3) • Internet : • http: //www. cie. co. at/cie/ • http: //colorpro. com/info/ • http: //ziggy. derby. ac. uk/ • http: //www. colourware. co. uk • http: //www. poynton. com • http: //www. colourtech. org • http: //www. cis. rit. edu/mcsl © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 8

Light and Colour - Summary • • • The Electromagnetic Spectrum Visible spectrum/monochromators Light

Light and Colour - Summary • • • The Electromagnetic Spectrum Visible spectrum/monochromators Light Sources Absorption and Reflection Metamerism and colour constancy Fluorescence © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 9

Light and Colour - Definitions • Light – That aspect of radiant energy of

Light and Colour - Definitions • Light – That aspect of radiant energy of which the human observer is aware, through visual sensations arising from stimulation of the retina by the radiant energy. • Colour – That aspect of visual perception dependent on the spectral composition of observed radiant energy. • Colour – “Color is the aspect of appearance of objects and lights which depends upon the spectral composition of the radiant energy reaching the retina of the eye and upon its temporal and spatial distribution thereon. ” (Judd, DB) © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 10

What is Light? • Greeks • Pythogorean school assumed every visible object emits a

What is Light? • Greeks • Pythogorean school assumed every visible object emits a steady stream of particles • Aristotle concluded that light travels something like waves • Ancient Greeks knew that light travels in straight lines • Hero – discovered the angle of incidence and the angle of reflection are always equal • 1621 Snell tried to explain why a straight pole stuck in the water at an angle no longer appears straight to the observer. He named the bending of the light through a medium refraction. © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 11

What is light? • Snell failed to discover why the light bends. • 1678

What is light? • Snell failed to discover why the light bends. • 1678 Huygens suggested the answer – he suggested that the refractive index of any material is determined by the speed with which light travels through it. The greater the refractive index the slower light would travel through the medium. (Light as a wave. ) • Newton (1666) (Light as a particle) • Young (Light as a wave) • Maxwell (mid 19 th century) – identified light as part of a vast continuous spectrum of electromagnetic radiation. (Light as a wave) • Einstein (1905) applies Planck’s quantum theory and postulates light may have wave and particle properties. © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 12

Light and Colour – The Electromagnetic Spectrum • The spectrum and coloured light –

Light and Colour – The Electromagnetic Spectrum • The spectrum and coloured light – Newton (1666) © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 13

Light and Colour – Prism Monochromator • Blue light refracted more, Red light refracted

Light and Colour – Prism Monochromator • Blue light refracted more, Red light refracted less • Newton’s experiments © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 14

Light and Colour – Diffraction Grating • Where θ is the angle of diffraction,

Light and Colour – Diffraction Grating • Where θ is the angle of diffraction, λ is the wavelength of the incident light, d is the groove spacing (eg 300 lines per mm gives spectrum 10 mm in length) and n is the integer defining the spectral order. © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 15

Light and Colour – The Rainbow • Descartes (1637) © Huw Owens - University

Light and Colour – The Rainbow • Descartes (1637) © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 16

Light and Colour – The Rainbow (An explanation) Sunlight Secondary Rainbow Sunlight Primary Rainbow

Light and Colour – The Rainbow (An explanation) Sunlight Secondary Rainbow Sunlight Primary Rainbow © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 17

Light and Colour- Spectral Power Distributions • Light sources are specified by their spectral

Light and Colour- Spectral Power Distributions • Light sources are specified by their spectral power curves. This is a graph that plots power (or energy) against wavelength. © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 18

Light and Colour – Light Sources • White light sources can be divided into

Light and Colour – Light Sources • White light sources can be divided into two categories: • 1. Continuous • These are usually incandescent light emitted by hot bodies such as the sun, flames or heated metallic filaments such as tungsten. The most important light source is the sun. • 2. Line © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 19

Fraunhofer Lines • The spectrum of light was carefully examined by Joseph von Fraunhofer

Fraunhofer Lines • The spectrum of light was carefully examined by Joseph von Fraunhofer in 1814. Using a similar setup to Newton (except he used a narrow slit to define a ray of sunlight). • He found the solar spectrum contained a number of sharp dark lines where certain colours of the spectrum were missing. • Two of these lines (D 1 and D 2)correspond to the yellow sodium lines. © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 20

Colour Temperature – Blackbody Radiators • Max Planck (1900) – If a body is

Colour Temperature – Blackbody Radiators • Max Planck (1900) – If a body is heated, like a black iron poker placed in a fire, it will become a barely perceptible dull red when it reaches about 700° C. • More visible light is produced as the temperature rises (shifts from red to orange and then to yellow). This gave rise to the term COLOUR TEMPERATURE. • Leads to colloquial terms such as “red hot” but unlike psychological colours red is a cold colour and blue is a hot colour. © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 21

Colour Temperature © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 22

Colour Temperature © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 22

Line Sources • Low pressure gas discharge lamps: pass electric current through a vapour

Line Sources • Low pressure gas discharge lamps: pass electric current through a vapour of various elements. • SODIUM vapour gives sodium ‘D’ lines at 589 nm and 589. 6 nm (almost monochromatic), used for street lighting • MERCURY vapour is used in fluorescent lamps, 4 peaks in the visible, one in the UV. The phosphors coating the glass spreads the light to other wavelengths including red. • TRIPHOSPHOR lamps – Phillips TL 84, F 11. Have three main peaks one in each of the red, green and blue. • NEON lights – red line is prominent. Used in advertising. © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 23

Fluorescent Lights • Fluorescent lights are low pressure mercury lamps with a coating of

Fluorescent Lights • Fluorescent lights are low pressure mercury lamps with a coating of phosphors on the inside of a glass tube that spreads the light, and in particular enhances the light at the red end of the spectrum. SPD of Fluorescent Lamp SPD of Triphosphor Lamp (TL 84) Mercury lines © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 24

Reflectance • The colour of a surface depends on how much is absorbed by

Reflectance • The colour of a surface depends on how much is absorbed by the material and how much is scattered, transmitted and reflected. • The reflectance properties of a surface are specified by its surface spectral reflectance (SSR) curve. • The SSR curve is a plot of the percentage (or proportion) of reflectance against wavelength across the visible spectrum. Note the shapes and heights of the SSRs. Yellow and red do not peak like green and blue. Freshly fallen snow is close to 97% reflectance. Black velvet fabric is approx 0. 5%. Perfect white And perfect black are theoretical. Our perception Of the grey scale (even visual steps between Black and white) is non-linear. A mid-grey has a Reflectance of ~20% at all wavelengths. © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 25

Surface Spectral Reflectance (SSR) • The SSR of a surface does not change when

Surface Spectral Reflectance (SSR) • The SSR of a surface does not change when the light source is changed. • If two samples have identical SSR curves then they will be a visual match under different light sources. • Therefore a SSR curve may be thought of as the “fingerprint” of a colour. © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 26

Colour Constancy • Definition: This is when a coloured surface appears not to change

Colour Constancy • Definition: This is when a coloured surface appears not to change when the light source is changed. • The converse is called colour inconstancy. • Colour standards should be colour constant. © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 27

Metamerism • Metamerism is the phenomenon of two colours that match under one set

Metamerism • Metamerism is the phenomenon of two colours that match under one set of conditions but fail to match under a different set. • Four types of metamerism are recognised: • Illuminant • Observer (matches for one person and not another) • Field size (2° to 10°) • Geometric (eg Metallic paints) © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 28

Metamerism (Illuminant) • When a standard and a batch match under one light source

Metamerism (Illuminant) • When a standard and a batch match under one light source but do not match under a different light source they are said to be metameric and exhibit metamerism. • A perfect non-metameric match can only be achieved when the SSR curve of the batch is identical to that of the standard. • To achieve a metameric match the SSR curves of the standard and the batch must cross at least three times across the visible spectrum (at least once in each third of the spectrum). © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 29

Metamerism © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 30

Metamerism © Huw Owens - University of Manchester : 10/24/2021 30