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JPEG to UCS(cie1960) Converter - Color Space Converter

JPEG color space introduction

Also known as the JPEG color space.There are 3 channels in total, Y,range from 0 to 255.Cb,range from 0 to 255.Cr,range from 0 to 255.
The JPEG standard was created by the Joint Photographic Experts Group and was officially published as an ISO standard in 1992.
JPEG, which stands for Joint Photographic Experts Group. The file format is typically .jpg or .jpeg.
The compression method involves transforming the image to a frequency domain using a Discrete Cosine Transform (DCT), quantizing the frequency components, and then encoding the result. JPEG images also support various levels of compression, which can be adjusted to balance image quality and file size.
JPEG is ubiquitous in digital photography, web graphics, and online image sharing due to its efficient compression methods.
JPEG uses a lossy compression technique, which means that some image quality is lost in the compression process, but the reduced file size is useful for storage and bandwidth considerations.

UCS(cie1960) color space introduction

Also known as the UCS(cie1960) color space.There are 3 channels in total,U,range from 0 to 100.V,range from 0 to 100.W,range from 0 to 100.
Developed by the International Commission on Illumination (CIE) in 1960, it was intended to provide a uniform color scale that would more closely align with human vision.
The primary name is CIE 1960 UCS (Uniform Color Scale). It is also referred to as the CIE 1960 (u, v) chromaticity space.
Colors in the CIE 1960 UCS are expressed in terms of chromaticity coordinates 'u' and 'v' derived from the CIE XYZ color space, with the addition of a 'W' coordinate representing the luminance factor.
The CIE 1960 UCS is used for applications where a more perceptually linear color space is useful. It's often used in color research and for specifying the colors of light sources and illuminants.
The CIE 1960 UCS is an intermediate step towards the development of subsequent color spaces that are more perceptually uniform, such as CIELUV and CIELAB.

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