5K resolution
5K resolution refers to display formats with a horizontal resolution of around 5,000 pixels. The most common 5K resolution is, which has an aspect ratio of with around 14.7 million pixels, with four times the linear resolution of 720p. This resolution is typically used in computer monitors to achieve a higher pixel density, and is not a standard format in digital television and digital cinematography, which feature 4K resolutions and 8K resolutions.
In comparison to 4K UHD, the 5K resolution of offers 1280 extra columns and 720 extra lines of display area, an increase of 33.% in each dimension. This additional display area can allow 4K content to be displayed at native resolution without filling the entire screen, which means that additional software such as video editing suite toolbars will be available without having to downscale the content previews.
As of 2016, the world uses 1080p as the mainstream HD standard. However, there is a rapid increase in media content being released in 4K and even 5K resolution. Online streaming services such as Netflix and Amazon Video launched videos in 4K resolution in 2014 and are actively expanding their collection of videos in 4K resolution. As 4K content becomes more common, the usefulness of 5K displays in editing and content creation may lead to a higher demand in the future.
History
First camera with 5K video capture
On April 14, 2008, Red Digital Cinema Camera Company launched one of the first cameras capable of video capture at 5K resolutions. Red Epic uses the Mysterium X sensor which has a resolution of 51202700 and can capture at a framerate of up to 100fps. Cameras with 5K resolution are used occasionally for recording films in digital cinematography.Some photographic still cameras such as DSLRs can exceed 5K resolution when capturing still images, but not when capturing video. For example, the Canon EOS 5D Mark IV announced in August 2016 has a maximum resolution of pixels which is used for high resolution still images, but it can only capture video at a maximum of and a framerate of 30Hz.
First TV with 5K resolution
Samsung first demonstrated its 105-inch UN105S9W curved OLED TV at CES 2014. While Samsung lists the UN105S9W as a 4K UHD TV, it actually has native resolution of which classifies it as a 5K display due to the horizontal pixel count of ≈5,000.First monitor with 5K resolution
On September 5, 2014, Dell unveiled the first monitor with a 5K resolution, the UltraSharp UP2715K. This monitor featured a 27-inch display, giving it a pixel density of around 218px/in. The monitor only supported DisplayPort version 1.2, which is limited to at 30Hz. To work around this, the UP2715K implemented a system by which the bandwidth of two DisplayPort connections could be combined to achieve 60Hz, using a picture-by-picture mode to virtually treat the display as two smaller monitors side-by-side and driving each half with a separate DisplayPort connection.Examples of 5K resolutions
List of devices with 5K resolution
Monitors
Aspect Ratio | Device | Size | Dimensions | Dimensions | Resolution | Total pixels | Pixel Density | Interface used for 5K | Comments |
16∶9 | Dell UltraSharp UP2715K | 27 | 596.74335.66 | 23.4913.22 | 51202880 | 14.75 | 218 | Dual DisplayPort1.2 | First 5K monitor released |
16∶9 | Apple Retina 5K iMac | 27 | 596.74335.66 | 23.4913.22 | 51202880 | 14.75 | 218 | Custom internal 8-lane DP1.2 interface | First desktop with integrated 5K monitor released |
16∶9 | HP Z27q | 27 | 596.74335.66 | 23.4913.22 | 51202880 | 14.75 | 218 | Dual DisplayPort1.2 | |
16∶9 | Philips Brilliance 275P4VYKEB | 27 | 596.74335.66 | 23.4913.22 | 51202880 | 14.75 | 218 | Dual DisplayPort1.2 | |
16∶9 | Planar IX2790 | 27 | 596.74335.66 | 23.4913.22 | 51202880 | 14.75 | 218 | DisplayPort1.4 | |
16∶9 | iiyama ProLite XB2779QQS | 27 | 596.74335.66 | 23.4913.22 | 51202880 | 14.75 | 218 | DisplayPort1.4 | |
16∶9 | LG UltraFine 5K Display | 27 | 596.74335.66 | 23.4913.22 | 51202880 | 14.75 | 218 | Thunderbolt3 | First 5K Thunderbolt3 connected monitor released, aimed at Mac users, using a custom dual-DP1.2 controller |
64∶27 | LG 34WK95U | 34 | 793.77340.19 | 31.2513.39 | 51202160 | 11.06 | 163 | Thunderbolt3 / USB-C, DisplayPort1.4 | First monitor |
64∶27 | Philips 349P9H | 34 | 793.77340.19 | 31.2513.39 | 51202160 | 11.06 | 163 | USB-C | |
64∶27 | MSI Prestige PS341WU | 34 | 793.77340.19 | 31.2513.39 | 51202160 | 11.06 | 163 | USB-C, DisplayPort1.4 | |
32∶9 | Philips Brilliance 499P9H | 49 | 1,198.08336.96 | 47.1713.27 | 51201440 | 7.37 | 109 | HDMI2.0, DisplayPort1.4, USB-C | First monitor |
32∶9 | Dell Ultrasharp U4919DW | 49 | 1,198.08336.96 | 47.1713.27 | 51201440 | 7.37 | 109 | DisplayPort1.4, Thunderbolt3 | |
32∶9 | LG 49WL95 | 49 | 1,198.08336.96 | 47.1713.27 | 51201440 | 7.37 | 109 | HDMI2.0, DisplayPort1.4, USB-C | |
32∶9 | Samsung CRG9 | 49 | 1,198.08336.96 | 47.1713.27 | 51201440 | 7.37 | 109 | DisplayPort1.4 |
Televisions
Display interface and graphics card support
In order to fully utilize a display with a 5K resolution, the source and display both require support for advanced connection interfaces, since traditional interfaces such as VGA or DVI don't provide adequate bandwidth for 5K resolutions at acceptable framerates. The earliest interface to support 51202880 at 30Hz or above was DisplayPort version 1.2, which supported the resolution at 30Hz with 30bit/px color depth. DisplayPort1.2 was first implemented in the AMD Radeon HD 6850 and 6870 in October 2010. NVIDIA introduced DisplayPort1.2 on their products with the Kepler family of GPUs, starting with the GeForce GTX 680 in March 2012. The NVIDIA GeForce GTX 980, launched in late 2014, was the first graphics card to support HDMI2.0 which also supports 51202880 at 30Hz with 30bit/px color depth. The NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080 launched in mid 2016 and was the first graphics card to introduce support for DisplayPort1.3 and 1.4, which are capable of 51202880 at 60Hz with 24bit/px color depth. It was followed shortly by the AMD Radeon RX 480, which introduced support for HDMI2.0 and DisplayPort1.3/1.4 on the AMD side.Although 5K 60Hz over a single cable was only made possible in 2016 with the launch of the GeForce 1000 series and Radeon RX 400 series, monitors which predate DisplayPort1.3 such as the Dell UltraSharp UP2715K offer the ability to run at 5K 60Hz by using two DisplayPort1.2 connections concurrently in a specialized picture-by-picture mode. The Apple Retina 5K iMac released in 2014 used a custom internal interface with 8 lanes of DisplayPort1.2 to drive its display panel at 60Hz.