Abstract
ABSTRACT Recently, Ohno proposed a method for computing the correlated color temperature (CCT) of a light source and the shortest distance (with sign) between its chromaticity and that of the Planckian locus (D uv). In Ohno’s method, firstly a lookup table is chosen, and then a hybrid method based on the triangular and parabolic solutions is used to predict the CCT and D uv of a given light source. In this article, we found that spline interpolation is better than the parabolic solution for predicting CCT and D uv. Therefore, we propose two new hybrid methods based on the triangular and either spline interpolation or third-order interpolation using two local function values and two local second-order derivative values. Comprehensive tests using the lookup table with both 1% and 0.25% increments relative to the current selected color temperature demonstrate that the proposed methods outperform Ohno’s method.
Published Version
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