Printing full-color images In
graphic arts and
prepress, the usual technology for printing full-color images involves the superimposition of
halftone screens. These are regular rectangular dot patterns—often four of them, printed in cyan, yellow, magenta, and black. Some kind of moiré pattern is inevitable, but in favorable circumstances the pattern is "tight"; that is, the spatial frequency of the moiré is so high that it is not noticeable. In the graphic arts, the term
moiré means an
excessively visible moiré pattern. Part of the prepress art consists of selecting screen angles and halftone frequencies which minimize moiré. The visibility of moiré is not entirely predictable. The same set of screens may produce good results with some images, but visible moiré with others.
Television screens and photographs Moiré patterns are commonly seen on television screens when a person is wearing a shirt or jacket of a particular weave or pattern, such as a
houndstooth jacket. This is due to interlaced scanning in televisions and non-film cameras, referred to as
interline twitter. As the person moves about, the moiré pattern is quite noticeable. Because of this, newscasters and other professionals who regularly appear on TV are instructed to avoid clothing which could cause the effect. Photographs of a
TV screen taken with a
digital camera often exhibit moiré patterns. Since both the TV screen and the digital camera use a scanning technique to produce or to capture pictures with horizontal scan lines, the conflicting sets of lines cause the moiré patterns. To avoid the effect, the digital camera can be aimed at an angle of 30 degrees to the TV screen.
Marine navigation The moiré effect is used in shoreside beacons called "Inogon leading marks" or "Inogon lights", manufactured by Inogon Licens AB, Sweden, to designate the safest path of travel for ships heading to locks, marinas, ports, etc., or to indicate underwater hazards (such as pipelines or cables). The moiré effect creates arrows that point towards an imaginary line marking the hazard or line of safe passage; as navigators pass over the line, the arrows on the beacon appear to become vertical bands before changing back to arrows pointing in the reverse direction. An example can be found in the UK on the eastern shore of
Southampton Water, opposite
Fawley oil refinery (). Similar moiré effect beacons can be used to guide mariners to the centre point of an oncoming bridge; when the vessel is aligned with the centreline, vertical lines are visible. Inogon lights are deployed at airports to help pilots on the ground keep to the centreline while docking on stand.
Strain measurement In
manufacturing industries, these patterns are used for studying microscopic
strain in materials: by deforming a grid with respect to a reference grid and measuring the moiré pattern, the stress levels and patterns can be deduced. This technique is attractive because the scale of the moiré pattern is much larger than the deflection that causes it, making measurement easier. The moiré effect can be used in
strain measurement: the operator just has to draw a pattern on the object, and superimpose the reference pattern to the
deformed pattern on the deformed object. A similar effect can be obtained by the superposition of a
holographic image of the object to the object itself: the hologram is the reference step, and the difference with the object are the deformations, which appear as pale and dark lines.
Image processing Some
image scanner computer programs provide an optional
filter, called a "descreen" filter, to remove moiré pattern artifacts which would otherwise be produced when scanning printed
halftone images to produce digital images.
Banknotes Many
banknotes exploit the tendency of digital scanners to produce moiré patterns by including fine circular or wavy designs that are likely to exhibit a moiré pattern when scanned and printed.
Microscopy In
super-resolution microscopy, the moiré pattern can be used to obtain images with a resolution higher than the
diffraction limit, using a technique known as
structured illumination microscopy. double-layer
graphene, or
Van der Waals heterostructure of graphene and hBN, or
bismuth and
antimony nanostructures. In
transmission electron microscopy (TEM), translational moiré fringes can be seen as parallel contrast lines formed in
phase-contrast TEM imaging by the interference of diffracting crystal lattice planes that are overlapping, and which might have different spacing and/or orientation. Most of the moiré contrast observations reported in the literature are obtained using high-resolution phase contrast imaging in TEM. However, if probe aberration-corrected
high-angle annular dark field scanning transmission electron microscopy (HAADF-STEM) imaging is used, more direct interpretation of the crystal structure in terms of atom types and positions is obtained.
Materials science and condensed matter physics In condensed matter physics, the moiré phenomenon is commonly discussed for
two-dimensional materials. The effect occurs when there is mismatch between the lattice parameter or angle of the 2D layer and that of the underlying substrate, which some call moiré materials. The often significant changes in electronic properties when twisting two atomic layers and the prospect of electronic applications has led to the name
twistronics of this field. A prominent example is in twisted bi-layer
graphene, which forms a moiré pattern and at a particular
magic angle exhibits superconductivity and other important electronic properties. In
materials science, known examples exhibiting moiré contrast are
thin films or
nanoparticles of MX-type (M = Ti, Nb; X = C, N) overlapping with austenitic matrix. Both phases, MX and the matrix, have face-centered cubic crystal structure and cube-on-cube orientation relationship. However, they have significant lattice misfit of about 20 to 24% (based on the chemical composition of alloy), which produces a moiré effect.. By overlaying patterned layers, typically one fixed and one movable, small physical displacements produce visually amplified interference patterns. These patterns can be passively monitored using optical methods, such as standard cameras, to detect precise movements without the need for embedded electronics. This approach allows for the creation of passive, high-resolution input mechanisms such as sliders, knobs, and dials, which are robust to viewing angles and perspective distortion. As a result, the Moiré effect supports accurate, low-cost tracking in interactive systems, offering a novel solution for tangible and spatial user input.
Audible moiré If the beats of one track correspond to where in space a black dot or line exists and the beats of the other track correspond to the points in space where a camera is sampling light, because the frequencies are not exactly the same and aligned perfectly together, beats (or samples) will align closely at some moments in time and far apart at other times. The closer together beats are, the darker it is at that spot; the farther apart, the lighter. The result is periodic in the same way as a graphic moiré pattern. == See also ==