Computer Project
Computer Project
COMPUTER PROJECT
By Alayna Baptista.
*What is a Projector?
* A projector or image projector is an optical
device that projects an image (or moving
images) onto a surface, commonly a
projection screen. Most projectors create an
image by shining a light through a small
transparent lens, but some newer types of
projectors can project the image directly, by
using lasers.
*Evolution of the Projector
*Prehistory to 1100
* Projectors share a common history with camera in the camera
obscura. Camera obscura (Latin for "dark room") is the natural
optical phenomenon that occurs when an image of a scene at the
other side of a screen (or for instance a wall) is projected through
a small hole in that screen to form an inverted image (left to right
and upside down) on a surface opposite to the opening.
* The earliest projection of images was most likely done in primitive
shadowgraphy dating back to prehistory.
* The oldest known objects that can project images are Chinese
magic mirrors. The origins of these mirrors have been traced back
to the Chinese Han dynasty (206 BC – 24 AD)
* Revolving lanterns have been known in China as "trotting horse
lamps“, since before 1000 CE.
*1100 to 1500
* Concave mirrors
* The inverted real image of an object reflected by a concave
mirror can appear at the focal point in front of the mirror. In a
construction with an object at the bottom of two opposing
concave mirrors (parabolic reflectors) on top of each other, the
top one with an opening in its center, the reflected image can
appear at the opening as a very convincing 3D optical illusion.
* Fontana's lantern
* Around 1420 the Venetian scholar and
engineer Giovanni Fontana included a drawing
of a person with a lantern projecting an image
of a demon in his book about
mechanical instruments.
*1500 to 1700
* 16th to early 17th century
* Leonardo da Vinci is thought to have had a projecting lantern -
with a condensing lens, candle and chimney - based on a small
sketch from around 1515.
* Helioscope
* In 1612 Italian mathematician
Benedetto Castelli wrote
to his mentor, the Italian
astronomer, physicist,
engineer, philosopher and
mathematician Galileo
Galilei about projecting
images of the sun through a telescope invented in 1608) to study
the recently discovered sunspots.
* Steganographic mirror
* The 1645 first edition of German Jesuit
scholar Athanasius Kircher’s book
Ars Magna Lucis et Umbrae included a
description of his invention. The
steganographic mirror is a primitive
projection system with a focusing lens and
text or pictures painted on a concave mirror
reflecting sunlight, mostly intended for long
distance communication.
* Magic lantern
* By 1659 Dutch scientist Christiaan Huygens had developed the magic
lantern, which used a concave mirror to reflect and direct as much of
the light of a lamp as possible through a small sheet of glass on which
was the image to be projected, and onward into a focusing lens at the
front of the apparatus to project the image onto a wall or screen.
* The magic lantern became a very popular medium for entertainment and
educational purposes in the 18th and 19th century.
* 1700 to 1900
* Solar microscope
* A few years before his death
in 1736 Polish-German-Dutch
physicist Daniel Gabriel
Fahrenheit reportedly
constructed a solar microscope,
which basically was a combination of the compound microscope with
camera obscura projection.
* Opaque projectors
* Swiss mathematician, physicist
astronomer, logician and
engineer Leonhard Euler
demonstrated an opaque projector,
now commonly known as an
episcope, around 1756.
It could project a clear image of
opaque images and (small) objects.
* 20th Century to Present Day
* In the early and middle parts of the
20th century, low-cost opaque
projectors were produced and
marketed as a toy for children.
* In the late 1950s and early 1960s,
overhead projectors began to be
widely used in schools and businesses.
The first overhead projector was used
for police identification work
* From the 1950s to the 1990s slide
projectors for 35 mm photographic
positive film slides were common for
presentations and as a form of
entertainment; family members and
friends would occasionally gather to view
slideshows, typically of vacation travels.
*How does it work?
* There are many kinds of projectors from the
past, but the one we will primarily be focusing
on will be LCD and DLP projectors.