Dictionary Definition
moire adj : of silk fabric; having a wavelike
pattern [syn: watered] n
: silk fabric with a wavy surface pattern [syn: watered-silk]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
moire
- Originally, a fine textile fabric made of the hair of an Asiatic goat; any textile fabric to which a watered appearance is given.
Extensive Definition
A moiré pattern (pronounced
/mwɑːˈreɪ/ or /ˈmɔəreɪ/ in English; [mwaʁe] in French) is an interference pattern
created, for example, when two grids are overlaid at an angle, or
when they have slightly different mesh sizes.
Moiré patterns are often an undesired artifact
of images
produced by various digital
imaging and computer
graphics techniques, for example when scanning a
halftone picture or
ray
tracing a checkered plane (the latter being a special case of
aliasing, due to
undersampling a
fine regular pattern).
The drawing on the right shows a moiré pattern.
The lines could represent fibers in moiré silk, or lines drawn on
paper or on a computer screen.
Pattern formation
The nonlinear interaction of the optical patterns of lines creates a real and visible pattern of roughly horizontal dark and light bands, the moiré pattern, superimposed on the lines. More complex line moiré patterns are created if the lines are curved or not exactly parallel. Moiré patterns revealing complex shapes, or sequences of symbols embedded in one of the layers (in form of periodically repeated compressed shapes) are created with shape moiré, otherwise called band moiré patterns. One of the most important properties of shape moiré is its ability to magnify tiny shapes along either one or both axes, that is, stretching. A common 2D example of moiré magnification occurs when viewing a chain-link fence through a second chain-link fence of identical design. The fine structure of the design is visible even at great distances.Terminology
The term originates from moire (or moiré in its
French form), a type of textile, traditionally of
silk but now also of
cotton or synthetic
fiber, with a rippled or 'watered' appearance.
The history of the word moiré is complicated. The
earliest agreed origin is the Arabic mukhayyar (مُخَيَّر in Arabic,
which means chosen), a cloth made from the wool of the Angora goat,
from khayyara (خيّر in Arabic), 'he chose' (hence 'a choice, or
excellent, cloth'). It has also been suggested that the Arabic word
was formed from the Latin marmoreus, meaning 'like marble'. By
1570 the word
had found its way into English as mohair. This was then adopted
into French as mouaire, and by 1660 (in the writings
of Samuel
Pepys) it had been adopted back into English as moire or moyre.
Meanwhile the French mouaire had mutated into a verb, moirer,
meaning 'to produce a watered textile by weaving or pressing',
which by 1823
had spawned the adjective moiré. Moire and moiré are now used
somewhat interchangeably in English, though moire is more often
used for the cloth and moiré for the pattern.
Implications in printing full-color images
In graphic arts and prepress, the usual technology for printing full-color images involves the superimposition of halftone screens. These are regular rectangular dot patterns—often four of them, printed in cyan, yellow, magenta, and black. Some kind of moiré pattern is inevitable, but in favorable circumstances the pattern is "tight;" that is, the spatial frequency of the moiré is so high that it is not noticeable. In the graphic arts, the term moiré means an excessively visible moiré pattern. Part of the prepress art consists of selecting screen angles and halftone frequencies which minimize moiré. The visibility of moiré is not entirely predictable. The same set of screens may produce good results with some images, but visible moiré with others.In manufacturing industries,
these patterns are used for studying microscopic strain
in materials: by deforming a grid with respect to a reference grid
and measuring the moiré pattern, the stress levels and patterns can
be deduced. This technique is attractive because the scale of the
moiré pattern is much larger than the deflection that causes it,
making measurement easier.
Moirés on TV screens
Moiré patterns are commonly seen on television
screens directly when a person is wearing a shirt or jacket of a
particular weave or pattern, such as a houndstooth jacket, due to
sampling problems in the television camera. As the person moves
about, the Moiré pattern is quite noticeable. Because of this,
newscasters and other professionals who appear on TV regularly are
instructed to avoid clothing which could cause the effect.
Taking a picture of a TV screen with a
digital
camera often produces severe moiré patterns.
Calculations
Moiré of parallel patterns
Geometrical approach
Let us consider two patterns made of parallel and
equidistant lines, e.g., vertical lines. The step of the first
pattern is p, the step of the second is p+δp, with δp>0.
If the lines of the patterns are superimposed at
the left of the figure, the shift between the lines increase when
going to the right. After a given number of lines, the patterns are
opposed: the lines of the second pattern are between the lines of
the first pattern. If we look from a far distance, we have the
feeling of pale zones when the lines are superimposed, (there is
white between the lines), and of dark zones when the lines are
"opposed".
The middle of the first dark zone is when the
shift is equal to p/2. The nth line of the second pattern is
shifted by n·δp compared to the nth line of the first network. The
middle of the first dark zone thus corresponds to
- n·δp = p/2
- n = \frac.
- d = n \cdot p = \frac
- 2d = \frac
- the bigger the step, the bigger the distance between the pale and dark zones;
- the bigger the discrepancy δp, the closer the dark and pale zones; a great spacing between dark and pale zones mean that the patterns have very close steps.
The principle of the moiré is similar to the
Vernier
scale.
Interferometric approach
Let us consider now two transparent patterns with
a contrast I that varies with a sinus law:
- I_1(x) = I_0 \cdot \sin (2\pi \cdot k_1 \cdot x)
- I_2(x) = I_0 \cdot \sin (2\pi \cdot k_2 \cdot x)
- I(x) = I_0 \cdot ( \sin (2\pi \cdot k_1 \cdot x) + \sin (2\pi \cdot k_2 \cdot x) )
- I(x) = I_0 \cdot 2 \cos \left ( 2\pi \frac \cdot x \right ) \cdot \sin \left ( 2\pi \frac \cdot x \right )
- \frac = \frac = \frac \cdot \left ( \frac - \frac \right )
- \lambda = 2\frac \approx 2\frac .
This phenomenon is similar to the stroboscopy.
Rotated patterns
Let us consider two patterns with the same step
p, but the second pattern is turned by an angle α. Seen from far,
we can also see dark and pale lines: the pale lines correspond to
the lines of nodes,
that is, lines passing through the intersections of the two
patterns.
If we consider a cell of the "net", we can see
that the cell is a rhombus: it is a parallelogram with the
four sides equal to d = p/sin α; (we have a right triangle which hypothenuse is d
and the side opposed to the α angle is p).
The pale lines correspond to the small diagonal of the rhombus. As the
diagonals are the bisectors of the
neighbouring sides, we can see that the pale line makes an angle
equal to α/2 with the perpendicular of the lines of each
pattern.
Additionally, the spacing between two pale lines
is D, the half of the big diagonal. The big diagonal 2D is the
hypothenuse of a right triangle and the sides of the right angle
are d(1+cos α) and p. The Pythagorean
theorem gives:
- (2D)2 : d2(1+cos α)2 + p2
- (2D)^2 = \frac(1+ \cos \alpha)^2 + p^2
- (2D)^2 = 2 p^2 \cdot \frac
- sin α ≈ α
- cos α ≈ 1
- D ≈ p / α
We can see that the smaller the α, the farthest
the pale lines; when the both patterns are parallel (α = 0), the
spacing between the pale lines is "infinite" (there is no pale
line).
There are thus two ways to determine α: by the
orientation of the pale lines and by their spacing
- α ≈ p / D
Application to strain measurement
The moiré effect can be used in strain
measurement: the operator just has to draw a pattern on the object,
and superimpose the reference pattern to the deformed pattern on the
deformed object.
A similar effect can be obtained by the
superposition of an holographic image of the object
to the object itself: the hologram is the reference step, and the
difference with the object are the deformations, which appear as
pale and dark lines.
References
External links
- Removing Moiré Patterns
- A live demonstration of the Moiré effect that stems from interferences between circles
- Moiré Pattern Videos:Creative Commons Videos illustrating moiré patterns in motion.
- Moiré Clock: MAKE yourself a moiré clock
- The Magic Moving Picture Book is a reproduction of an ingenious 1898 book that used moiré patterns to create animated images where wheels turn, smoke billows, and water ripples.
moire in Czech: Moaré
moire in German: Moiré-Effekt
moire in Estonian: Moiré efekt
moire in Spanish: Patrón de moiré
moire in French: Moiré (effet de
contraste)
moire in Italian: Effetto moirè
moire in Lithuanian: Muaras (optika)
moire in Dutch: Moiré-patroon
moire in Japanese: モアレ
moire in Polish: Prążki moiré
moire in Portuguese: Padrão moiré
moire in Russian: Муаровый узор
moire in Swedish: Moiré
(interferensmönster)
moire in Ukrainian: Муар
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Dalmatian, antigorite, burele, butterfly, candy cane,
chameleon, chatoyant, cheetah, chrysotile, confetti, crazy quilt, firedog, harlequin, iridal, iridescent, iridial, iridian, iris, irisated, irised, jaguar, leopard, mackerel, mackerel sky,
marble, marbled paper,
mother-of-pearl, nacre,
nacred, nacreous, nacry, ocelot, opal, opalescent, opaline, opaloid, ophite, patchwork quilt, pavonian, pavonine, peacock, pearlish, pearly, rainbow, rainbowlike, rainbowy, serpentine, serpentine
marble, shot silk, spectrum, tortoise shell,
tortoise-shell, zebra