tint chart - significado y definición. Qué es tint chart
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Qué (quién) es tint chart - definición

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Tint Knob; Hue error; NTSC Tint; NTSC tint

Record chart         
RANKING OF RECORDED MUSIC DURING A PARTICULAR TIME PERIOD
Chart Hit; Music chart; Record charts; Pop chart; Chart hit; Music charts; Chart topper; Singles chart; Albums chart; Album charts; Single charts; Singles charts; Hit chart; Hit charts; Album Chart; Record Charts; Top 20; Chart-topper; Music Chart; Music Charts; Record Chart; Chart (music); Popularity chart; Chart position (record sales); Chart position; Top 10 (chart); Radio chart; Chilean Singles Chart; Chart hits
A record chart, in the music industry, also called a music chart, is a ranking of recorded music according to certain criteria during a given period. Many different criteria are used in worldwide charts, often in combination.
Sea chart         
  • Use of colour in British [[Admiralty chart]]s
  • A pre-Mercator nautical chart of 1571, from Portuguese cartographer [[Fernão Vaz Dourado]] (c. 1520 – c.1580). It belongs to the so-called ''plane chart'' model, where observed latitudes and magnetic directions are plotted directly into the plane, with a constant scale, as if the Earth's surface were a flat plane (Portuguese National Archives of Torre do Tombo, Lisbon)
  • Detail of a United States NOAA chart, showing a harbour area
  • Automatically labeled nautical chart
  • A nautical chart of the [[Warnemünde]] harbor shown on [[OpenSeaMap]]
  • Portion of an electronic chart of the [[Bering Strait]]
TOPOGRAPHIC MAP OF A MARITIME AREA AND ADJACENT COASTAL REGIONS
Nautical charts; Navigation map; Navigation chart; Nautical map; Navigation Chart; Undersea features; Chart correction; Maritime chart; Navigational chart; Sea map; Nautical Chart; Hydrographic chart; Marine charts; Nautical maps; Sea chart; Hydrographic map
·- A chart or map on which the lines of the shore, islands, shoals, harbors, ·etc., are delineated.
Nautical chart         
  • Use of colour in British [[Admiralty chart]]s
  • A pre-Mercator nautical chart of 1571, from Portuguese cartographer [[Fernão Vaz Dourado]] (c. 1520 – c.1580). It belongs to the so-called ''plane chart'' model, where observed latitudes and magnetic directions are plotted directly into the plane, with a constant scale, as if the Earth's surface were a flat plane (Portuguese National Archives of Torre do Tombo, Lisbon)
  • Detail of a United States NOAA chart, showing a harbour area
  • Automatically labeled nautical chart
  • A nautical chart of the [[Warnemünde]] harbor shown on [[OpenSeaMap]]
  • Portion of an electronic chart of the [[Bering Strait]]
TOPOGRAPHIC MAP OF A MARITIME AREA AND ADJACENT COASTAL REGIONS
Nautical charts; Navigation map; Navigation chart; Nautical map; Navigation Chart; Undersea features; Chart correction; Maritime chart; Navigational chart; Sea map; Nautical Chart; Hydrographic chart; Marine charts; Nautical maps; Sea chart; Hydrographic map
A nautical chart is a graphic representation of a sea area and adjacent coastal regions. Depending on the scale of the chart, it may show depths of water and heights of land (topographic map), natural features of the seabed, details of the coastline, navigational hazards, locations of natural and human-made aids to navigation, information on tides and currents, local details of the Earth's magnetic field, and human-made structures such as harbours, buildings, and bridges.

Wikipedia

Tint control

Because the NTSC color television standard relies on the absolute phase of the color information, color errors occur when the phase of the video signal is altered between source and receiver, or due to non linearities in electronics. To correct for phase errors, a tint control is provided on NTSC television sets, which allows the user to manually adjust the phase relationship between the color information in the video and the reference for decoding the color information, known as the "color burst", so that correct colors may be displayed.

The tint control is normally set by sight to create satisfactory skin tones in a picture. The range of adjustment typically allows these colors to be adjusted from a green to a magenta tint. Television sets produced in recent decades typically include a (sometimes non-defeatable) distortion of the color decoding spectrum, to minimize the visual effects of phase error and lessen the need to adjust the tint control.

On broadcast equipment, such as timebase correctors and studio monitors, this control is typically marked "phase," as it adjusts the phase of the color signal with respect to the color burst signal.

Since the problem of phase errors in the real world became well known after the introduction of NTSC, the later PAL and SECAM color television standards attempted to correct for them. PAL uses the same color modulation scheme as NTSC but averages the received color information over adjacent scan lines, resulting in reduced color detail but canceling out small to moderate phase errors. (Severe phase errors result in picture grain and loss of color saturation in the PAL scheme.) SECAM uses a different modulation scheme that does not rely on the phase of the color signal. Because of this the amplitude of the color signal (color saturation) is unaffected as well. Because SECAM only broadcasts half the color information on each line, the color resolution is halved just like in the PAL system. Most TV sets designed for these later standards lack tint controls, as PAL and SECAM are not supposed to experience the problems a tint control would correct. (This leaves the viewer unable to correct for color errors originating at the transmission site, however.) Multistandard sets have tint controls for NTSC viewing, but the controls are inoperative when watching PAL or SECAM signals.