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Mired

 
(mīrd)

(thermodynamics) A unit used to measure the reciprocal of color temperature, equal to the reciprocal of a color temperature of 106 kelvins. Derived from micro-reciprocal-degree.


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[Etymology: micro reciprocal degrees] temperature A scheme for expressing very high temperatures, the reciprocal of that in kelvins, expressed at the ‘micro’ level. E.g. 25 000 K, having reciprocal 40 × 10-6, is 40 mired.

WordNet: mired
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Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The adjective has one meaning:

Meaning #1: entangled or hindered as if e.g. in mire
  Synonym: involved


Wikipedia: Mired
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Close up of the Planckian locus in the CIE 1960 color space, with the isotherms in mireds. Note the even spacing of the isotherms when using the reciprocal temperature scale. The even spacing of the isotherms on the locus implies that the mired scale is a better measure of perceptual color difference than the temperature scale.
Close up of the Planckian locus in the CIE 1960 color space, with the isotherms in kelvins. The range of isothermal color temperatures, as in the previous diagram, is from 1000K (1000MK-1) to 10,000K (100MK-1).

Contracted from the term micro reciprocal degree, the mired is a unit of measurement used to express color temperature. It is given by the formula:

M=\frac{1000000}{T}

where M is the mired value desired, and T is the color temperature in kelvins.

1 mired is equivalent to 106 K−1 or MK−1. For convenience, decamireds are sometimes used, each decamired containing 10 mireds. The SI unit is the reciprocal megakelvin (MK−1), shortened to mirek, but this term has not gained traction.[1]

Its use dates back to Irwin G. Priest's observation in 1932 that the just noticeable difference between two illuminants is based on the difference of their reciprocal temperatures, rather than the difference in the temperatures themselves.[2]

Examples

A blue sky, which has a color temperature T of about 25,000 K, has a mired value of M=40 mireds, while a standard electronic photography flash, having a color temperature T of 5000 K, has a mired value of M=200 mireds.

In photography, mireds are used to indicate the color temperature shift provided by a filter or gel for a given film and light source. For instance, to use a tungsten light (3200K) in natural light (say, 5700K) without introducing a color cast, one would need a corrective filter or gel providing a mired shift of

\frac{10^6}{5700} - \frac{10^6}{3200} \approx -137 \mbox{MK}^{-1}

This corresponds to a CTB (color temperature blue) filter.[3]

References

  1. ^ Ohta, Noboru; Robertson, Alan R. (2005). Colorimetry: Fundamentals and Applications. Wiley. p. 84. ISBN 0470094729. 
  2. ^ Priest, Irwin G. (February 1932). "A proposed scale for use in specifying the chromaticity of incandescent illuminants and various phases of daylight" (abstract). JOSA 23 (2): 41–45. doi:10.1364/JOSA.23.000041. http://www.opticsinfobase.org/abstract.cfm?URI=josa-23-2-41. 
  3. ^ Brown, Blain (2002). Cinematography: Theory and Practice : Imagemaking for Cinematographers. Focal Press. p. 172. ISBN 0240805003. http://books.google.com/books?id=1JL2jFbNPNAC&pg=PA172&lpg=PA172&dq=ctb+159+mired&source=web&ots=PDPXhR3tGc&sig=9SpdERYY47_BRvVycD6ZFcDJxR0&hl=en. 

 
 
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