See-through display

http://dbpedia.org/resource/See-through_display an entity of type: ArchitecturalStructure

Un affichage transparent est un affichage électronique qui permet à l'utilisateur de voir ce qui est affiché sur l'écran tout en étant capable de voir à travers. Ces affichages sont souvent abusivement qualifiés d'hologrammes avec lesquels ils partagent le principe d'images semblant flotter dans l'air. Les affichages transparents se trouvent sous forme d'écrans transparents sont généralement réalisés à partir d'un écran transparent, d'un écran holographique ou à l'aide d'un miroir semi-réfléchissant. rdf:langString
A see-through display or transparent display is an electronic display that allows the user to see what is shown on the screen while still being able to see through it. The main applications of this type of display are in head-up displays, augmented reality systems, digital signage, and general large-scale spatial light modulation. They should be distinguished from image-combination systems which achieve visually similar effects by optically combining multiple images in the field of view. Transparent displays embed the active matrix of the display in the field of view, which generally allows them to be more compact than combination-based systems. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Affichage transparent
rdf:langString See-through display
xsd:integer 37663996
xsd:integer 1115166229
rdf:langString Un affichage transparent est un affichage électronique qui permet à l'utilisateur de voir ce qui est affiché sur l'écran tout en étant capable de voir à travers. Ces affichages sont souvent abusivement qualifiés d'hologrammes avec lesquels ils partagent le principe d'images semblant flotter dans l'air. Les affichages transparents se trouvent sous forme d'écrans transparents sont généralement réalisés à partir d'un écran transparent, d'un écran holographique ou à l'aide d'un miroir semi-réfléchissant.
rdf:langString A see-through display or transparent display is an electronic display that allows the user to see what is shown on the screen while still being able to see through it. The main applications of this type of display are in head-up displays, augmented reality systems, digital signage, and general large-scale spatial light modulation. They should be distinguished from image-combination systems which achieve visually similar effects by optically combining multiple images in the field of view. Transparent displays embed the active matrix of the display in the field of view, which generally allows them to be more compact than combination-based systems. Broadly, there are two types of underlying transparent display technology, absorptive (chiefly LCDs) and emissive (chiefly electroluminescent, including LEDs and "high-field" emitters). Absorptive devices work by selectively reducing the intensity of the light passing through the display, while emissive devices selectively add to the light passing through the display. Some display systems combine both absorptive and emissive devices to overcome the limitations inherent to either one. Emissive display technologies achieve partial transparency either by interspersing invisibly small opaque emitter elements with transparent areas or by being partially transparent.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 21337

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