Tuesday, 3 February 2015

What are Pixels?

We have all come across the term 'pixel' in our everyday life. But do we really know what it is?
Pixels are all around us- in our computers, laptops, tablets. They are the very reason you are able to read this blog! 
The word pixel has been derived from the words 'picture element'. Going by the formal definition- 'a pixel is the smallest programmable/controllable element of a picture represented on a screen'. In layman's terms it is the smallest part of anything that you are viewing on your screens.Typically the colours you see on your screens have been formed by 3 primary colours- red, blue and green as shown in the picture-
But don't judge a book by its cover - these 3 primary colours combine in different proportions to give 16,777,216 different colour variations!!
Now we know that pixels are the smallest controllable elements. But how small they really are?
The answer is very interesting- pixels should be thought as a logical unit rather than a physical one. To explain this more clearly, I would like to introduce a new term- Resolution! (and no it has nothing to do with your new year's  resolutions)


Resolution is the number of pixels contained on a display monitor. The sharpness of the image on a display depends on the resolution and the size of the monitor. The same pixel resolution will be sharper on a smaller monitor and gradually lose sharpness on larger monitors because the same number of pixels are being spread out over a larger number of inches.So now you know why an image becomes blurred when you magnify it! The physical size of a pixel depends on how you've set the resolution for the display screen. If you've set the display to its maximum resolution, the physical size of a pixel will equal the physical size of a dot  of the display. If, however, you've set the resolution to something less than the maximum resolution, a pixel will be larger than the physical size of the screen's dot (that is, a pixel will use more than one dot).




Monday, 2 February 2015

Curiosity Matters

Curious stardust is the hangout place for all the curious creatures who are made up of stardust (and yes it includes human beings, which you possibly are and if you are curious you have landed in the right place, so congrats!).
This blog is devoted to all those who are always questioning everything, to all those who think they can make a difference because the ones who are crazy enough to think they can change the world are the ones who do!
It's good that you have read so far. It certainly means you are different which is a very good thing.
I also want to share a bitter truth with you- we are nothing but pieces of some star that lived long ago and will also disintegrate to that when the time comes. We are lost in this mysterious but still interesting universe. So why not explore and know this universe( or maybe even multiverse) better?
Let's jump into this endless ocean and endeavour to reveal its secrets!!
Richard P. Feynman

“I don't feel frightened by not knowing things, by being lost in a mysterious universe without any purpose, which is the way it really is, as far as I can tell. Possibly. It doesn't frighten me.”


----Richard Feynman