By introducing a negative or positive charge, the black or
white particles inside an EPD that carry a corresponding charge are moved to the surface of the display, where they create a picture or text.
Not exact matches
Inside, hundreds of scientists in
white coats are sitting in front of a huge screen that shows live images from the
particle collisions of CERN's accelerator.
Building on the work from the 1970s, the display used electric charge to rotate black and
white ink
particles inside tiny capsules located in the screen.
The
particles inside the capsules come in different colors and with different electric charges; in the most basic incarnation of an e-paper screen, these
particles will be either black or
white.
Eventually, characters are running around with a blue shield
inside a
white shield, crowded in with other enemies, a couple dozen bullets, and an array of explosions and
particle effects.