(Red Green Blue) The computer's native color space, which is the color system for capturing and displaying images. RGB was derived from our own perception of color because human eyes are sensitive to red, green and blue (see trichromaticity).
Capturing
Cameras and scanners capture color with sensors that record the varying intensities of red, green and blue at each pixel location in the frame. See 24-bit color, CCD,
Display and Printing (RGB and CMYK)
For screen display, red, green and blue pixels (dots) are energized to the appropriate intensity. When all three pixels are turned on high, white is produced. As intensities are equally lowered, shades are derived. The base color of the screen appears when all pixels are off.
For printing on paper, the CMYK color space is used, not RGB. Combinations of cyan, magenta, yellow and black ink make up all the colors. See CMYK.
Video Processing (RGB or YUV)
TV/video signals are mostly in the YUV color space. They are converted to RGB in the computer for editing when RGB is the desired output. If YUV is the desired output, and the video editing program supports YUV, there is no need to convert to RGB for internal processing. However, no matter which color space is used for editing, all data are converted to RGB for screen display. See YUV, Adobe RGB, sRGB and color space.
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