Christie CP2000 User Manual page 133

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GLOSSARY
Professional public presentation of theatrical content by electronic means,
particularly emphasizing projectors such as the CP2000 whose image source is
digital data. Also known as d-cinema and (rarely) e-cinema.
Digital Interpolation 
Also known as digital scaling. The process of averaging pixel information when
scaling (resizing) an image up or down. When reducing the size of an image, adjacent
pixels are averaged to create fewer pixels. When increasing the size of an image,
additional pixels are created by averaging together adjacent pixels in the original
smaller image.
Dot Clock 
The maximum frequency of the pixel clock.
E-EDID 
The Enhanced Extended Display Identification Data standard, established by VESA,
enables properties (such as resolution) of a display device to be detected by the
display card in a controlling device such as a PC. The PC, in turn, can then output in
a matching format to fill the display. Some sources used with the projector are VESA
E-EDID reported.
E-stop 
Emergency stop of the presentation due to equipment failure, a commotion in the
audience, or any trigger from the theatre's life safety system that could require
stopping the show, raising the house lights, and enabling a PA announcement.
Foot-candle 
The intensity of visible light per square foot.
Footlambert 
The luminance (brightness) which results from one foot-candle of illumination falling
2
on a perfectly diffuse surface. 1 fL = 3.423 candela per square meter (cd/m
). For
example, the SMPTE RP 98 calls for theatre screen luminance of 12 to 22 fL; 16 +/-
2
2 fL (55 +/- 7 cd/m
) is the open gate target according to SMPTE 196M. For cinema
2
applications, xenon lamp wattage is approximated to achieve this level using 12 W/ft
2
x (screen height squared) or 5 W/ft
of total 'scope image area, for matte screens and
typical lenses.
Frame Rate 
The frequency at which complete images are generated. For non-interlaced signals,
the frame rate is identical to the vertical frequency. For interlaced signals, the frame
rate (also known as field rate) is one half of vertical frequency.
Gain or Screen Gain 
The ability of a screen to direct incident light to an audience. A flat matte white wall
has a gain of approximately 1. Screens with gain less than 1 attenuate incident light;
screens with gain more than 1 direct more incident light to the audience but have a
narrow viewing angle. For example: An image reflecting off a 10 gain screen appears
10 times brighter than it would if reflected off a matte white wall. Curved screens
usually have larger gain than flat screens.
GVG 
Grass Valley Group (formerly part of Tektronix). More specifically, the .gvg file
format used for compressed video, audio, and timecode stream transfer in the Profile
video server products, proposed for standardization by SMPTE and as a primary
component of MXF. Initially implemented on Fibre Channel using FTP with TCP/IP
but extensible to XTP or other protocols. Previously called GXF: General Exchange
Format.
HDCP 
High-bandwidth Digital Content Protection protocol of keys and encryption helps
prevent DVI source material from being copied.
A-4
LIT MAN USR CP2000
020-100032-04 Rev. 1 (03/14)

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