Image resolution describes the detail an image holds. The term applies equally to digital images, film images, and other types of images. Higher resolution means more image detail. Image resolution can be measured in various ways. Basically, resolution quantifies how close lines can be to each other and still be visibly resolved. Resolution units can be tied to physical sizes (e.g. lines per mm, lines per inch) or to the overall size of a picture (lines per picture height, also known simply as lines, or TV lines). Furthermore, line pairs are often used instead of lines. A line pair is a pair of adjacent dark and light lines, while lines counts both dark lines and light lines. A resolution of 10 lines per millimeter means 5 dark lines alternating with 5 light lines, or 5 line pairs per millimeter. Photographic lens and film resolution are most often quoted in line pairs per millimeter.
Resolution varies from 15 meters to 1 centimeter depending on the source. Above states ground resolution, not pixels. But pixel resolution would again depend on source.
The HTC One M9's screen resolution is 1080x1920 pixels, 441 ppi pixel density.
bitmap or raster images are in other words pixel images and every pixel image must have resolution, resolution is number of pixels per inch, cm
It depends on the purpose. 400 pixel resolution on a printer is about average. It produces clean documents. However, 1200 pixel resolution will generate much smoother details.
Pixel
Depend on screen resolution of user. for example if screen resolution is 1024 then 1% Of 1024 = 10.24 pixel that's the way it should stand for.
Interpolation. Make a new pixel the average of its surrounding pixel colors.
It probably refers to the resolution of a screen. That would be low resolution.
A native resolution on a monitor refers to the resolution it is meant to be run at, where the resolution usually matched to being pixel perfect.
Image processing involves various operations on images. An image is a collection of pixels. Each pixel has its position and resolution.
Most land areas in Google Earth are covered in satellite imagery with a resolution of about 15 meters per pixel and highest resolution is about 1 inch per pixel.
A pixel is a dot on the screen. These don't have a fixed size - even on the same monitor, a pixel may be larger or smaller, depending on the selected resolution.