Every image on every screen in the world is composed of pixels, yet the word itself is younger than many of the people staring at those screens. 'Pixel' was coined around 1965, and its path from a NASA lab to universal usage is a compact history of the digital image.
The word is a portmanteau of 'pix' and 'element.' 'Pix' was Hollywood trade slang from the 1930s — an informal plural of 'pic,' which was itself a clipping of 'picture.' 'Picture' comes from Latin 'pictūra' (a painting), from the verb 'pingere' (to paint, to embroider, to decorate), which descends from Proto-Indo-European *peik- (to cut, mark, or color). The same root produced
The concept of a 'picture element' — the smallest discrete component of a digital image — predates the word. At Bell Telephone Laboratories in the 1950s, engineers working on early television and digital imaging systems used the abbreviation 'pel' for 'picture element.' But the word 'pixel' was coined independently by Frederic C. Billingsley at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California, around 1965. Billingsley was involved in processing images transmitted
For a decade or two, 'pixel' remained primarily a technical term in image processing, computer graphics, and display engineering. The personal computer revolution of the 1980s brought it into wider awareness — users learned to think in terms of screen resolution, measured in pixels. The digital camera revolution of the 1990s and 2000s made 'megapixel' a household word. Today, 'pixel' is as familiar
The word has generated derivatives: 'megapixel' (one million pixels, a measure of camera resolution), 'pixelated' (showing visible pixels, typically because an image has been enlarged beyond its resolution), 'subpixel' (a component of a pixel, since each pixel on an LCD screen typically contains separate red, green, and blue elements), 'voxel' (a volumetric pixel, the three-dimensional equivalent), and 'texel' (a texture element in 3D graphics).
Google adopted 'Pixel' as a brand name for its line of smartphones and laptops, further embedding the word in everyday consciousness. The choice reflects the word's associations with precision, clarity, and visual technology.
That the fundamental unit of every digital image traces its name through NASA space probes, Hollywood slang, Latin painting, and a Proto-Indo-European root meaning 'to mark or color' is a satisfying arc. The concept of marking a surface to create a picture — the oldest human artistic impulse, visible in the cave paintings of Lascaux — is encoded in the etymology of the word that describes how pictures are made in the twenty-first century.