how does a television produce sound and picture
It poos on your face
IT JUST POOPED
You might observe the TV, and see what it produces... The main purpose of the TV is to produce light (the images on the screen) and sound. Like most energy-converting devices, it will also produce waste heat.
Light, sound, waste heat.
Light and sound as well as heat, which is a waste product.
A TeleVision because to produce an image, it needs to have some light shining from the back of the screen, therefore emitting light and it has speakers on it to produce sound all from electricity.
I believe the colors are red, green, and blue.
I believe the colors are red, green, and blue.
OLED is organic light emitting diode they let out less light then a typical LED tv which i believe is designed to save you more money buy not having to produce as much light
OLED is organic light emitting diode they let out less light then a typical LED tv which i believe is designed to save you more money buy not having to produce as much light
they produce protons and electrons they are collition then the light produce and heat produce
OLED stands for organic light emitting diode. Like conventional LEDs, OLEDs emit light in a very controlled fashion. OLED technology allows high a density of LEDs to be produced and is likely to become a very common technology for television in the coming years. LCD televisions use a static light behind the LCD panel. The light remains on all the time and LCD shutters open and close to control the amount of light that is passed through. OLED displays do not use a separate light source as each LED emits light as required. Every pixel requires a red, green and blue LED which between them can produce any color at any brightness. Note: Many televisions are advertised as LED televisions. With a very few exceptions, the LED refers to the illumination, with LEDs replacing cold cathode tubes as the light source. The active display technology is still LCD so these are not true LED televisions in the way that OLED displays are.
some very old tvs use small incandescent bulbs to light up power or button indicators, but most only contain the picture tube, which is technically a more advance type of light bulb. I wouldnt mess with it though, as it operates at very high voltage and can store the charge for years.
does fire produce light