01 Fundamentals

What is D65?
The reference white point.

CIE Standard Illuminant D65 is the international reference for daylight illumination embedded in every display standard from sRGB to Rec. 2020. This is what it is, why it exists, and why it matters to anyone who cares about color accuracy.

Defined byCIE Publication 15:2004
Chromaticityx=0.3127, y=0.3290
CCT 6504 K
Used inBT.709, BT.2020, sRGB, Display P3

The CIE Standard Illuminant

D65 is a standard illuminant defined by the International Commission on Illumination (CIE) to represent average northern hemisphere daylight. It was formally standardized in 1966 and has since become the reference white point for virtually every color standard in digital imaging, television, and professional display technology.

The "D" in D65 stands for "Daylight," and the "65" refers to the nominal correlated color temperature of approximately 6500 Kelvin. More precisely, the actual CCT of D65 is 6504 K a distinction that matters in precision measurement contexts.

CIE Publication 15:2004

"The D illuminants are mathematical representations of phases of natural daylight, derived from spectrophotometric measurements of daylight taken at various locations and times of day."

Why daylight?

The human visual system evolved under daylight. Our color perception the way we judge whether a white surface is truly white, whether a red is saturated, whether a skin tone looks natural is calibrated by millennia of experience with daylight illumination.

When engineers at the ITU and IEC needed to define a reference white point for television and computer display standards, daylight was the natural choice. D65 represents the phase of daylight most common in temperate northern hemisphere conditions: overcast midday sky, which is bluer and cooler than direct sunlight.

The chromaticity coordinates

D65 is defined not by a single number but by its position on the CIE 1931 chromaticity diagram the two-dimensional map of all colors visible to the human eye:

D65 Chromaticity CIE 1931 (x, y)
x chromaticity
0.3127
y chromaticity
0.3290
CCT (exact)
6504 K
CCT (nominal)
6500 K
CIE u' (1976)
0.1978
CIE v' (1976)
0.4683

D65 vs. 6500K a critical distinction

One of the most common sources of confusion is treating D65 and "6500K" as interchangeable. They are not. A correlated color temperature (CCT) of 6500K tells you only approximately where a light source falls on the Planckian locus the curve traced by a theoretical blackbody radiator as it heats up.

D65 is defined by its full spectral power distribution a curve showing how much energy the source emits at each wavelength from 300nm to 780nm. Two light sources can both measure 6500K yet have entirely different spectral shapes, rendering colors differently and failing to serve as equivalent D65 references.

Common Mistake

A light source labeled "6500K" is not necessarily D65. Always look for published CIE chromaticity coordinates (x, y) and a CRI Ra value. True D65-compliant sources will show x 0.3127 0.01 and y 0.3290 0.01.

Where D65 is used

D65 is the reference white point for every major digital imaging and display standard in use today:

Display & Imaging Standards Using D65 as Reference White
ITU-R BT.709
HDTV production worldwide
ITU-R BT.2020
Ultra HD / 4K / 8K television
IEC 61966-2-1 (sRGB)
Consumer displays, web, operating systems
DCI-P3 (theatrical)
x=0.314, y=0.351 (~6300K) NOT D65
Display P3 / P3-D65
D65 used by Apple, Netflix, HDR mastering
Display P3
Apple devices, HDR consumer displays
SMPTE ST 2080-3
HDR reference viewing environment
Key Takeaway

When a display engineer, colorist, or calibrator says "the display is calibrated to D65," they mean the display's white point the color it produces when asked to show pure white matches the CIE D65 chromaticity coordinates. Every other color on the display is rendered relative to that white reference. If the ambient light in the room doesn't also match D65, the viewer's perception of those colors is distorted.