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  2. Silicon X-tal Reflective Display - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silicon_X-tal_Reflective...

    SXRD (Silicon X-tal Reflective Display) is Sony's proprietary variant of liquid crystal on silicon, a technology used mainly in projection televisions and video projectors. In the front and rear-projection television market, it competes directly with JVC 's D-ILA and Texas Instruments ' DLP .

  3. Rear-projection television - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rear-projection_television

    On June 6, 2007, Sony did unveil a 70" rear-projection SXRD model KDS-Z70XBR5 that was 40% slimmer than its predecessor and weighed 200 lbs, which was somewhat wall-mountable. However, on December 27, 2007, Sony decided to exit the RPTV market. [21] [22] [23] Mitsubishi began offering their LaserVue line of wall mountable rear-projection TVs in ...

  4. WEGA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WEGA

    [citation needed] Introduced in 2002, Sony's plasma display televisions were also branded as Plasma WEGA until being superseded by the BRAVIA LCD line. Sony's rear-projection televisions, either Silicon X-tal Reflective Display (SXRD) or LCD-based, were branded as Grand WEGA until Sony discontinued production of rear-projection receivers.

  5. Digital cinema - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_cinema

    Except for Sony, who used to use their own SXRD technology, all use the Digital light processing (DLP) technology developed by Texas Instruments (TI). D-Cinema projectors are similar in principle to digital projectors used in industry, education, and domestic home cinemas, but differ in two important respects.

  6. Video projector - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Video_projector

    A video projector is an image projector that receives a video signal and projects the corresponding image onto a projection screen using a lens system. Video projectors use a very bright ultra-high-performance lamp (a special mercury arc lamp ), Xenon arc lamp , metal halide lamp , LED or solid state blue, RB, RGB or fiber-optic lasers to ...

  7. Grazing incidence diffraction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grazing_incidence_diffraction

    Surface X-ray diffraction (SXRD), which is similar to RHEED but uses X-rays, and is also used to interrogate surface structure. [ 3 ] X-ray standing waves , another X-ray variant where the intensity decay into a sample from diffraction is used to analyze chemistry.

  8. Crystal oscillator frequencies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crystal_oscillator_frequencies

    Multiplies (×128) to 10.3125 GHz, copper wire bit rate. Can be generated from 20.141601 xtal. 81.000 PAL/NTSC/SDTV: Clock for digital video systems (27 MHz is an exact multiple of the PAL and NTSC line frequencies). 3x the 27 MHz master clock for MPEG-2 video systems (see also 81 MHz). 81.62 VGA

  9. NTSC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NTSC

    The actual video signal, which is amplitude-modulated, is transmitted between 500 kHz and 5.45 MHz above the lower bound of the channel. The video carrier is 1.25 MHz above the lower bound of the channel. Like most AM signals, the video carrier generates two sidebands, one above the carrier and one below. The sidebands are each 4.2 MHz wide.