Sanakirja
Tekoälykääntäjä
Kuvat 1

Ääntäminen

  • ÄäntäminenSouthern England:
    • IPA: /həˈleɪʃən/
KieliKäännökset
puolahalo
suomivalopiha
venäjäореолообразование (oreoloobrazovanije), ореол (oreol)

Määritelmät

Substantiivi

  1. The action of light surrounding some object as if making a halo.
  2. The blurring of light around a bright area of a photographic image, or on a television screen.

Esimerkit

  • She was, as you know, to the west-ward of us, and the sunset was making a great flame of red light to the back of her, so that she showed a little blurred and indistinct by reason of the halation of the light, which almost defeated the eye in any attempt to see her rotting spars and standing rigging, submerged, as they were, in the fiery glory of the sunset.
  • As the result of a series of experiments on halation carried out with backed and unbacked plates, ordinary film and stripping film, Ernest Marriage concludes that there are two varieties of halation, one due to reflection from the support and the other due to spreading of the light in the film.
  • Halation, properly speaking, is the reflection and diffusion, within the film, from the lighter areas to the adjacent darker ones.
  • Among other interesting and weighty opinions, which were in general agreement with our contentions, was one by Mr. H. A. Staddon of Goodmayes, a gentleman who had made a particular hobby of fakes in photography. His report is too long and too technical for inclusion, but, under the various headings of composition, dress, development, density, lighting, poise, texture, plate, atmosphere, focus, halation, he goes very completely into the evidence, coming to the final conclusion that when tried by all these tests the chances are not less than 80 per cent. in favour of authenticity.
  • Halation can be prevented or diminished by using an absorbing layer between the sensitive emulsion and the support (anti-halo undercoat) or on the back of the support (anti-halo backing).

Taivutusmuodot

Monikkohalations

Luokat


The blurring of light around a bright area of a photographic image, or on a television screen.

Anatomy of the halation effect: the incoming light penetrates the blue, green, and red layers of the film stock (in that order), then are typically absorbed by the anti-halation backing. The strongest rays are not completely absorbed, and bounce back into the red layer and create halation.