Ppmcie User Manual(1) | General Commands Manual | Ppmcie User Manual(1) |
ppmcie - draw a CIE color chart as a PPM image
ppmcie
[ -rec709|-cie|-ebu|-hdtv|-ntsc|-smpte ] [-xy|-upvp]
[-red rx ry]
[-green gx gy]
[-blue bx by]
[-white wx wy]
[-size edge]
[{-xsize|-width} width]
[{-ysize|-height} height]
[-noblack] [-nowpoint] [-nolabel] [-noaxes] [-full]
This program is part of Netpbm(1).
ppmcie creates a PPM file containing a plot of the CIE "tongue" color chart -- to the extent possible in a PPM image. Alternatively, creates a pseudo-PPM image of the color tongue using RGB values from a color system of your choice.
The CIE color tongue is an image of all the hues that can be described by CIE X-Y chromaticity coordinates. They are arranged on a two dimensional coordinate plane with the X chromaticity on the horizontal axis and the Y chromaticity on the vertical scale. (You can choose alternatively to use CIE u'-v' chromaticity coordinates, but the general idea of the color tongue is the same).
Note that the PPM format specifies that the RGB values in the file are from the ITU-R Recommendation BT.709 color system, gamma-corrected. And positive. See ppm(1) for details. If you use one of the color system options on ppmcie, what you get is not a true PPM image, but is very similar. If you display such ppmcie output using a device that expects PPM input (which includes just about any computer graphics display program), it will display the wrong colors.
However, you may have a device that expects one of these variations on PPM.
In every RGB color system you can specify, including the default (which produces a true PPM image) there are hues in the color tongue that can't be represented. For example, monochromatic blue-green with a wavelength of 500nm cannot be represented in a PPM image.
For these hues, ppmcie substitutes a similar hue as follows: They are desaturated and rendered as the shade where the edge of the Maxwell triangle intersects a line drawn from the requested shade to the white point defined by the color system's white point. Furthermore, unless you specify the -full option, ppmcie reduces their intensity by 25% compared to the true hues in the image.
ppmcie draws and labels the CIE X-Y coordinate axes unless you choose otherwise with options.
ppmcie draws the Maxwell triangle for the color system in use on the color tongue. The Maxwell triangle is the triangle whose vertices are the primary illuminant hues for the color system. The hues inside the triangle show the color gamut for the color system. They are also the only ones that are correct for the CIE X-Y chromaticity coordinates shown. (See explanation above). ppmcie denotes the Maxwell triangle by rendering it at full brightness, while rendering the rest of the color tongue as 3/4 brightness. You can turn this off with options.
ppmcie also places a black cross at the color system's white point (with the center of the cross open so you can actually see the white color) and displays in text the CIE X-Y chromaticities of the primary illuminants and white point for the color system. You can turn this off with options, though.
ppmcie annotates the periphery of the color tongue with the wavelength, in nanometers of the monochromatic hues which appear there.
ppmcie displays the black body chromaticity curve for Planckian radiators from 1000 to 30000 kelvins on the image. This curve traces the colors of black bodies as various temperatures.
You can choose from several standard color systems, or specify one of your own numerically.
CIE charts, by their very nature, contain a very large number of colors. If you're encoding the chart for a color mapped device or file format, you'll need to use pnmquant or ppmdither to reduce the number of colors in the image.
In addition to the options common to all programs based on
libnetpbm (most notably -quiet, see
Common Options ), ppmcie recognizes the following command line
options:
You may abbreviate any option to its shortest unique prefix.
A color spectrum is a linear combination of one or more monochromatic colors.
A color is a set of color spectra that all look the same to the human eye (and brain). Actually, for the purposes of the definition, we assume the eye has infinite precision, so we can call two color spectra different colors even though they're so close a person couldn't possibly tell them apart.
The eye contains 3 kinds of color receptors (cones). Each has a different response to the various monochromatic colors. One kind responds most strongly to blue, another red, another green. Because there are only three, many different color spectra will excite the cones at exactly the same level, so the eye cannot tell them apart. All such spectra that excite the cones in the same way are a single color.
Each point in the color tongue represents a unique color. But there are an infinite number of color spectra in the set that is that color; i.e. an infinite number of color spectra that would look to you like this point. A machine could tell them apart, but you could not.
Remember that the colors outside the highlighted triangle are approximations of the real colors because the PPM format cannot represent them (and your display device probably cannot display them). That is, unless you're using a variation of PPM and a special display device, as discussed earlier in this manual.
A color is always relative to some given maximum brightness. A particular beam of light looks lime green if in a dim field, but pea green if in a bright field. An image on a movie screen may look pitch black because the projector is not shining any light on it, but when you turn off the projector and look at the same spot in room light, the screen looks quite white. The same light from that spot hit your eye with the project on as with it off.
The chart shows two dimensions of color. The third is intensity. All the colors in the chart have the same intensity. To get all possible colors in the gamut, Make copies of the whole chart at every intensity between zero and the maximum.
The edge of the tongue consists of all the monochromatic colors. A monochromatic color is one with a single wavelength. I.e. a color that is in a rainbow. The numbers you see are the wavelengths in nanometers.
Any straight line segment within the tongue contains colors which are linear combinations of two colors -- the colors at either end of the line segment.
Any color in the chart can be created from two other colors (actually, from any of an infinite number of pairs of other colors).
All the colors within a triangle inside the tongue can be created from a linear combination of the colors at the vertices of that triangle.
Any color in the tongue can be created from at most 3 monochromatic colors.
The highlighted triangle shows the colors that can be expressed in the tristimulus color system you chose. (ITU-R BT.709 by default). The corners of the triangle are the 3 primary illuminants in that system (a certain red, green, and blue for BT.709). The edges of the triangle, then, represent the colors you can represent with two of the primary illuminants (saturated colors), and the interior colors require all three primary illuminants (are not saturated).
In the ITU-R BT.709 color system (the default), the white point is defined as D65, which is (and is named after) the color of a black body at 6502 kelvins. Therefore, you should see the temperature curve on the image pass through the white part of the image, and the cross that marks the white point, at 6502 kelvins.
D65 white is supposed to be the color of the sun. If you have a perfect BT.709 display device, you should see the color of the sun at the white point cross. That's an important color, because when you look at an object in sunlight, the color that reflects of the object is based on the color of sunlight. Note that the sun produces a particular color spectrum, but many other color spectra are the same color, and display devices never use the actual color spectrum of the sun.
The colors at the corners of the triangle have the chromaticities phosphors in a monitor that uses the selected color system. Note that in BT.709 they are very close to monochromatic red, green, and blue, but not quite. That's why you can't display even one true color of the rainbow on a video monitor.
Remember that the chart shows colors of constant intensity, therefore the corners of the triangles are not the full colors of the primary illuminants, but only their chromaticities. In fact, the illuminants typically have different intensities. In BT.709, the blue primary illuminant is far more intense than the green, which is more intense than the red. Designers did this in order to make an equal combination of red, green, and blue generate gray. I.e. a combination of full strength red, full strength green, and full strength blue BT.709 primary illuminants is D65 white.
The tongue has a sharp straight edge at the bottom because that's the limit of human vision. There are colors below that line, but they involve infrared and ultraviolet light, so you can't see them. This line is called the "line of purples."
Copyright (C) 1995 by John Walker (kelvin@fourmilab.ch)
WWW home page: http://www.fourmilab.ch/
Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and its documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted, without any conditions or restrictions. This software is provided as is without express or implied warranty.
This manual page was generated by the Netpbm tool 'makeman' from HTML source. The master documentation is at
31 July 2005 | netpbm documentation |