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Some vendors call their 24-bit color depth with FRC panels 30-bit panels; however, true deep color displays have 10-bit or more color depth without FRC. The HDMI 1.3 specification defines a bit depth of 30 bits (as well as 36 and 48 bit depths). [21]
HDR10 is defined as: [4] EOTF: SMPTE ST 2084 (); Bit depth: 10 bit; Color primaries: ITU-R BT.2020 (identical to BT.2100 primaries) Static metadata: SMPTE ST 2086 (mastering display color volume), MaxFALL (maximum frame-average light level), and MaxCLL (maximum content light level)
Often known as truecolor and millions of colors, 24-bit color is the highest color depth normally used, and is available on most modern display systems and software. Its color palette contains (2 8 ) 3 = 256 3 = 16,777,216 colors. 24-bit color can be represented with six hexadecimal digits.
Qualcomm: Snapdragon 888 mobile SoC allows the capture of 10-bit HDR HEIF still photos. [120] [121] Sony: Sony α7S III and α1 cameras can capture HDR photos in the Rec. 2100 color space with the HLG transfer function, the HEIF format, Rec. 2020 color primaries, a bit depth of 10 bit and a 4:2:2 or 4:2:0 subsampling.
Bit depth: 10-bit or more (up to 16-bit) per color channel; Color primaries: ITU-R BT.2020; Maximum linearized pixel value: 10,000 cd/m 2 for each color R/G/B (content) Metadata (required): Mastering Display Color Volume Metadata [23] Metadata (optional): MaxCLL, MaxFALL [24] HDR10+ supports the full range PQ up to 10,000 cd/m 2. Being ...
Rec. 2020 defines a bit depth of either 10 bits per sample or 12 bits per sample. [2] 10 bits per sample Rec. 2020 uses video levels where the black level is defined as code 64 and the nominal peak is defined as code 940. Codes 0–3 and 1,020–1,023 are used for the timing reference.
This ratio uses half of the vertical and one-fourth the horizontal color resolutions, with only one-eighth of the bandwidth of the maximum color resolutions used. Uncompressed video in this format with 8-bit quantization uses 10 bytes for every macropixel (which is 4×2 pixels) or 10 bit for every pixel.
Bit depth may refer to: Color depth , also known as bit depth, the number of bits used to indicate the color of a single pixel Audio bit depth , the number of bits of information in each sample of digital audio