In Kelvin
Video Home System
Camera Control Unit
A phosphor (phosphorous) coated Raster
Automatic Gain Control
3200 degrees Kelvin
Stand with your feet apart and your elbows in.
Using imaginary lines, split the frame inot thirds and try to put the action at the intersection of the lines.
The area of a shot that is in focus.
525 lines
F-2.8
Zoom Tracking
F-22
32 - 104 degrees Farhenheit
Head room and nose room (talk space)
Interlace Scanning
The amount of light entering the camera.
5500 degrees Kelvin
2
An electron beam
A burn-in.
Remote Control Unit
Variable Focal Length
Charged Coupled Device
Video Gain
The scanning of odd lines and then even lines on a television is called what?
What F-stop setting lets in the least light?
What adjusts the camera's signal strength?
What is the proper color temperature of quartz (artificial) lighting?
What is another name for a zoom lens?
What is the accepted operating temperature range on a camera?
What does CCU stand for?
What receives the CRT beam within the TV?
How do we measure the "temperature" of color?
What does CCD stand for?
What does the F-stop control?
What does AGC stand for?
When following a moving subject, what option is utilized to keep the subject in focus?
What do we call a negative gray image in shots after pointing the camera at a light source for a long time?
How many lines make up a single frame (picture) in NTSC?
What does VHS stand for?
What is the "Rule-of-Thirds"?
What is the proper color temperature of natural light?
Inside of a TV, the CRT (Cathode Ray Tube) shoots what kind of beam to create the picture?
You are recording a football game while standing on the sidelines. You forgot a tripod and a monopod. How do you steady your shot?
What does RCU stand for?
What F-stop setting lets in the most light?
What is "Depth of Field"?
When framing a shot, leaving room from the top of the head and in front of the person are called what?
How many fields make up a single frame?