@@ -151,20 +151,29 @@ One stop is a doubling of luminance.
151151 }
152152</xmp>
153153
154+ <dfn export>Media white</dfn>
155+ is the color of a normal white background,
156+ or of white text on a dark background.
157+ It can be comfortably viewed, over the whole screen.
158+
154159In <dfn export>Standard Dynamic Range</dfn> (SDR),
155- the media white (the color of a normal white background,
156- or of white text on a dark background)
157- is the lightest possible color .
160+ media white is also
161+ lightest possible color,
162+ produced by full-intensity red, green, and blue .
158163
159164<div class="example" id="ex-SDR-dynamic-range">
160165 For example, in [=sRGB=] ,
166+ under standard viewing conditions,
161167 white is defined to have a luminance of 80 cd/m²
162168 while black is defined to have a luminance of 0.2 cd/m².
163169 Thus, the dynamic range is 8.6 stops.
164170</div>
165171
166- For SDR, [=luminance=] is treated as <em> relative</em> to media white.
167- Making the screen brighter does not change the dynamic range,
172+ It is common to adjust the overall brighness of the screen
173+ to acommodate user preference or viewing conditions
174+ which are different to the standard ones.
175+
176+ For SDR, making the screen brighter does not change the dynamic range,
168177because the darkest color also gets brighter.
169178
170179<div class="example" id="ex-SDR-brighter-dynamic-range">
@@ -175,9 +184,9 @@ because the darkest color also gets brighter.
175184</div>
176185
177186In <dfn export>High Dynamic Range</dfn> (HDR),
178- brighter colors than media white can be displayed.
179- For example, if media white on an HDR display is set to around 200 cd/m²
180- it might be possible to display highlights at 1000 cd/m².
187+ brighter colors than [= media white=] can be displayed.
188+ For example, if media white on an HDR display is set to 203 cd/m²
189+ it might be possible to display small highlights at 1000 cd/m².
181190Typically, the brightest colors can only be displayed
182191on a small part of the display,
183192and for a limited time.
@@ -190,25 +199,35 @@ This is because of energy usage and heating considerations.
190199 Thus, the dynamic range is 14.3 stops.
191200</div>
192201
193- For HDR, [=luminance=] is treated as <em> absolute</em> ,
194- rather than being relative to media white.
195- Using a brighter screen increases the dynamic range,
202+ For HDR, using a brighter screen increases the dynamic range,
196203while the luminance of media white remains constant.
197204
198205<div class="example" id="ex-HDR-PQ-dynamic-range">
199206 For example, using the ''rec2100-pq'' colorspace
200207 defined in [[Rec_BT.2100]] ,
201- the brightest peak white is defined to have a luminance of 10000 cd/m²
208+ the brightest peak white is defined to have a luminance of 10,000 cd/m²
202209 while the deepest black has a luminance of 0.001 cd/m².
203210 Thus, the encoded dynamic range is 23.3 stops.
204211</div>
205212
213+ When [[#Compositing-SDR-HDR]] , the media white for SDR content
214+ should be anchored at <strong> 203 cd/m²</strong>
215+ so that that the media white level
216+ of the inputs to compositing
217+ will end up at the media white level
218+ of the combined signal.
219+
220+ When displaying HDR (or mixed SDR and HDR) content,
221+ for displays which are less capable than the reference mastering display,
222+ and for viewing conditions different to the standard ones,
223+ a <dfn export>color re-rendering</dfn> step will be performed.
224+ This may result in a media white being displayed
225+ at a value lower or higher than 203 cd/m².
226+
206227Introducing Headroom {#introducing-headroom}
207228--------------------------------------------
208229
209- <em> This section is non-normative</em>
210-
211- The luminance level
230+ The peak [=luminance=] level
212231 which an HDR display can produce
213232 varies greatly.
214233
@@ -225,12 +244,12 @@ Introducing Headroom {#introducing-headroom}
225244
226245<div class="example" id="ex-low-headroom">
227246 For example, a low-end HDR display
228- (which just meets the requirements of
247+ (which <em> just</em> meets the requirements of
229248 <a href="https://displayhdr.org/">DisplayHDR 400</a> ,
230249 the lowest tier of Vesa Certified DisplayHDR conformance [[DisplayHDR]] )
231250 might display media white at
232251 up to 200 cd/m<sup> 2</sup>
233- while their peak white is only
252+ while the peak white is only
234253 400 cd/m<sup> 2</sup>
235254 (at the brightest media white, only one stop of HDR headroom).
236255</div>
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