Basics of colorimetry
Colorimetry - Theoretical elements
Article REF: R6440 V2
Basics of colorimetry
Colorimetry - Theoretical elements

Authors : Daniel DUPONT, Daniel STEEN

Publication date: December 10, 2004, Review date: February 25, 2015 | Lire en français

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2. Basics of colorimetry

2.1 Trivariance of visual sensation

The visual appearance of color is three-dimensional in nature. It involves three psychosensory parameters corresponding to the subjective sensations of hue, saturation and luminosity. Hue is defined by the words blue, green, red and so on. Saturation expresses the degree of coloration, as opposed to the quantity of white radiation appreciated in colored radiation; a color is less saturated the more it appears washed white. Finally, luminosity, an achromatic factor, refers to the level of colored stimulus; it varies from a maximum non-glare value to the absence of light (black). It's easy to see how, by varying these three parameters independently of each other, you can achieve every imaginable color sensation.

But while trivariance...

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