Difference between revisions of "IPhone Night Shift"
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(Created page with "===iPhone Night Shift=== In iOS 9.3, Apple introduced iPhone users to a feature known as "Night Shift." Night Shift alters the cool light of the iPhone to contain warmer hues...") |
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In iOS 9.3, Apple introduced iPhone users to a feature known as "Night Shift." Night Shift alters the cool light of the iPhone to contain warmer hues, believing that the blue light prevents users from sleeping well at night. This feature can be analyzed by a Fiber Optic UV-Vis Spectrometer. | In iOS 9.3, Apple introduced iPhone users to a feature known as "Night Shift." Night Shift alters the cool light of the iPhone to contain warmer hues, believing that the blue light prevents users from sleeping well at night. This feature can be analyzed by a Fiber Optic UV-Vis Spectrometer. | ||
− | + | '''Figure 1.'''A blank white screen was shown at full intensity on an iPhone 6 equipped with iOS 10.2.1. The wavelengths of light emitted by the screen were recorded with an Ocean Optics Red Tide USB650 UV Spectrometer. The emission spectrum was recorded with and without Night Shift mode enabled. |
Revision as of 22:47, 26 January 2017
In iOS 9.3, Apple introduced iPhone users to a feature known as "Night Shift." Night Shift alters the cool light of the iPhone to contain warmer hues, believing that the blue light prevents users from sleeping well at night. This feature can be analyzed by a Fiber Optic UV-Vis Spectrometer.
Figure 1.A blank white screen was shown at full intensity on an iPhone 6 equipped with iOS 10.2.1. The wavelengths of light emitted by the screen were recorded with an Ocean Optics Red Tide USB650 UV Spectrometer. The emission spectrum was recorded with and without Night Shift mode enabled.