All types of 3D glasses can be
divided into two categories: passive and active. Active 3D glasses
interact wirelessly with images on a screen to enhance 3D viewing,
whereas passive glasses do not. Passive 3D glasses have been around
since three-dimensional viewing first arrived in the 1920s, and are
themselves divided into two major subcategories: anaglyphic and
polarized glasses.
Practically anyone who has
ever seen a 3D movie is familiar with anaglyph glasses, which feature a
combination of red and blue lenses. Anaglyphic 3D works by projecting
two identical but slightly offset images on a screen, each image
tinted with a different color. To the naked eye, an anaglyphic image
appears blurry, with reddish and bluish hues. The glasses use
color-filtering lenses to target one image to the right eye, and
another to the left; the result is that each eye sees a different
image, but the mind is tricked into believing it sees only one. The
mind compensates for this by focusing in between the two offset images
and blending them into one, which creates an illusion of depth.
Passive polarized glasses
operate on the same basis as anaglyph glasses, only they filter light
waves rather than color. Again, two identical and slightly offset
images are superimposed, except in this case each image is polarized to
project light differently than the other. With polarized 3D glasses,
each eye only processes one image. Again, however, the mind is tricked
into blending the two images into one, creating a 3D experience.
Unlike anaglyphic 3D, which can be projected from any screen,
polarization 3D works best with screens able to relay different light
frequencies without sacrificing picture quality.
On a simpler scale, Pulfrich
glasses can also create a 3D effect, but only with objects moving
across the viewer's plane of vision. These 3D glasses have one
completely transparent lens, and another that is heavily tinted. As an
object moves across the visionary plane, the image is immediately
transmitted to the eye through the transparent lens, but the tinted
lens causes a slight delay. This delay causes the brain to add more
depth to the image, creating somewhat of a 3D effect.
Since the advent of LCD technology,
which is capable of digitally transmitting images at super
high-speeds, 3D glasses have made great technological leaps and
bounds. Today, active shutter glasses are able to communicate
wirelessly with an LCD display, interacting with the action on the
screen via infrared signals. This enables the lens on active glasses
to shutter back and forth between different light filters, further
enhancing the 3D viewing experience.
Another significant upside to
active technology is that it is adaptable to 3D TV sets. A 3D-ready
television set, a pair of active shutter glasses, and a stereoscopic
sync signal connector will allow the LCD display and glasses to
communicate with one another. A growing number of television broadcasts
are being produced to take advantage of this technology.
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