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Each digital micromirror device contains nearly 800,000 tiny mirrors.
A DMD or digital micromirror device chip is at the heart of many video projectors.
Digital Light Processing is a brand of projector technology that uses a digital micromirror device.
This uses one, two, or three microfabricated light valves called digital micromirror devices (DMDs).
At the heart of this new system is the digital micromirror device, a semiconductor with hundreds of thousands of microscopic mirrors in a grid.
Using photolithography, a light exposure pattern is created on the substrate using a photomask or virtual photomask projected from a digital micromirror device.
The processor looks at such key picture elements as resolution, color and brightness, then reformats the signal and sends instructions to three units called digital micromirror devices.
There are digital micromirror devices used in video projectors and optics and micromirror devices for light deflection and control.
Each color beam hits a different Digital Micromirror Device (DMD) - a semiconductor chip that is covered in more than a million hinged mirrors.
It would be over a hundred years before technology led his principle to be developed into the Digital micromirror devices used in the DLP televisions we know today.
PhatLight LED chipset and uses a TI DLP digital micromirror device.
Each beam is focused onto its own digital micromirror device, which uses millions of tiny pivoting mirrors to create the pixels, or dots of color, that make up an image.
Three separate color lasers illuminate the digital micromirror device (DMD) in these projection TVs, producing a richer, more vibrant color palette than other methods.
Digital Light Processing (DLP), which uses one or three digital micromirror devices (DMDs) to create all of the pixels that make up the image.
Digital Micromirror Devices (DMD) were invented by Texas Instruments in 1987 and are the core of the DLP technology used for video projection.
Examples of the reflective LV type, are the Digital Micromirror Device (DMD), Eidophor's oil-film based system.
DLP is a Texas Instruments (TI) technology which relies on a Digital Micromirror Device (DMD) chip.
Laser-pulses with about 10 kHz repetition rate and various lengths are sent to a Digital Micromirror Device where each mirror directs the pulse either onto screen or into the dump.
Electrical motors, pneumatic actuators, hydraulic pistons, relays, comb drives, piezoelectric actuators, thermal bimorphs, digital micromirror devices and electroactive polymers are some examples of such actuators.
The Digital Micromirror Device was invented by Dr. Larry Hornbeck while working at Texas Instruments, also holding several patents relating to DMD technology.
DLP: A DLP projector uses a digital micromirror device (DMD) - a small, rectangular device made of microscopic mirrors - to make a picture.
The secret to this engineering marvel is a compact digital projector powered by a single, postage stamp sized Digital Micromirror Device (DMD) that generates high definition video images.
In DLP projectors, the image is created by microscopically small mirrors laid out in a matrix on a semiconductor chip, known as a Digital Micromirror Device (DMD).
DLP or Digital Light Processing - Many manufacturers produce this TV, which makes use of an optical semiconductor called a Digital Micromirror Device that depends on over a million tiny mirrors.
An example of an EASLM is the Digital Micromirror Device at the heart of DLP displays or Electrically controlled birefringent LCoS Displays.