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LCh

LCH, in color science, refers to the cylindrical representation of the CIE Lab color space. It uses three coordinates: L* for lightness, C* for chroma (colorfulness relative to a white), and h* for hue angle. L* ranges from 0 (black) to 100 (white); C* is nonnegative and varies with the color’s distance from the neutral axis; h* is an angle in degrees around the a-b plane, typically measured from the positive a* axis.

The conversion from Lab to LCH is straightforward: C* = sqrt(a*^2 + b*^2) and h* = atan2(b*, a*) expressed

Applications of LCH include color selection, color grading, and perceptual color difference measurements, where working in

Limitations include gamut constraints: not all Lab colors map to a displayable RGB color, so conversions may

in
degrees,
adjusted
to
the
range
[0,
360).
The
inverse
transformation
uses
a*
=
C*
cos(h*)
and
b*
=
C*
sin(h*),
with
L*
remaining
unchanged.
This
cylindrical
form
makes
hue
a
continuous
dimension
and
often
improves
interpretability
for
tasks
involving
color
selection
and
editing.
a
representation
that
separates
lightness,
chroma,
and
hue
can
simplify
comparisons
and
adjustments.
It
is
commonly
used
in
design,
printing,
and
digital
imaging,
usually
as
a
bridge
between
Lab-based
color
science
and
device-dependent
color
spaces
like
sRGB
or
CMYK.
require
clipping
or
gamut
mapping.
Hue
continuity
near
the
wrap-around
point
(0/360
degrees)
can
also
require
careful
handling.
LCH
is
a
descriptive,
perceptually
informed
coordinate
system
rather
than
a
device-restricted
color
space.