JP2 to PAM Converter

Transform JP2 photos into PAM format online free

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Secure Processing

Your JP2 images stay safe — uploads are deleted post-conversion, and all PAM outputs are purged from servers within 24 hours automatically.

Optimized Output

Get clean PAM output from your JP2 source — the conversion optimizes format-specific parameters for the best possible visual result.

Any Device

Convert JP2 to PAM on Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS, or Android. The browser-based tool works identically across every platform.

How to convert JP2 to PAM

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose pam or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your pam file right afterwards

About formats

JP2 (JPEG 2000 Part 1) is an image format based on the JPEG 2000 compression standard, developed by the Joint Photographic Experts Group and published as ISO/IEC 15444-1 in December 2000 as the successor to the original JPEG standard. Unlike JPEG's block-based discrete cosine transform, JPEG 2000 uses discrete wavelet transform (DWT) compression, which eliminates the characteristic 8x8 block artifacts visible in highly compressed JPEG images and instead produces a smooth, gradual quality degradation. The format supports both lossy and lossless compression within the same codestream, along with features absent from original JPEG: 16-bit and higher bit-depth images, arbitrary numbers of color channels, alpha transparency, region-of-interest coding (allocating more bits to important areas), and progressive quality or resolution refinement from a single compressed stream. One advantage is superior image quality at low bit rates — JPEG 2000 produces visibly cleaner images than JPEG at equivalent file sizes, particularly below 0.5 bits per pixel where JPEG exhibits severe blocking. The progressive decoding capability is another strength: a single JP2 file can be decoded at any resolution or quality level without encoding multiple versions, valuable for remote sensing and medical imaging where the same image must serve both thumbnail browsing and full-resolution analysis. JP2 is the mandated format for digital cinema (DCI), the preferred format in geospatial data (GeoJP2), and widely adopted in cultural heritage digitization.
Initial release: December 2000
PAM (Portable Arbitrary Map) is a raster image format added to the Netpbm family around the year 2000 by Bryan Henderson, the maintainer of Netpbm, as a generalization that unifies and extends the original PBM, PGM, and PPM formats. Where the classic Netpbm formats each handle a specific image type (PBM for bilevel, PGM for grayscale, PPM for color), PAM provides a single format that can represent any combination of channels, bit depths, and image types through a flexible ASCII header. The PAM header uses keyword-value pairs: WIDTH, HEIGHT, DEPTH (number of channels), MAXVAL (maximum sample value, up to 65535), and TUPLTYPE (a string identifying the image type — BLACKANDWHITE, GRAYSCALE, RGB, GRAYSCALE_ALPHA, RGB_ALPHA, or custom types). After the header, pixel data is stored in binary, with each sample occupying one or two bytes depending on MAXVAL. PAM's key innovation over its predecessors is native alpha channel support: GRAYSCALE_ALPHA (2-channel) and RGB_ALPHA (4-channel) tupletypes provide transparency without requiring a separate mask file, something the original PBM/PGM/PPM formats could not express. One advantage is format unification: a single PAM-reading implementation handles monochrome, grayscale, color, and alpha-augmented images, eliminating the need for separate parsers for each Netpbm variant. The extensible TUPLTYPE mechanism provides another practical strength — custom channel configurations (multispectral, depth + color, or any application-specific arrangement) can be represented and labeled without modifying the format specification. PAM is supported by Netpbm tools, ImageMagick, GIMP, and programming libraries that process the Netpbm family.
Initial release: 2000

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert JP2 to PAM?

PAM format has specific properties useful in certain technical contexts. Converting from JP2 lets you leverage those properties for your particular workflow.

What software opens PAM?

Use ImageMagick, Netpbm tools, XnView, GIMP to view and edit PAM. The format is well-supported across popular software packages.

Is batch JP2 to PAM conversion supported?

Absolutely. Queue up multiple JP2 images in a single session and convert them all to PAM simultaneously — no need to process one at a time.

Does this work on mobile devices?

Yes — the converter runs in any modern web browser, including mobile. Whether you use iOS, Android, Windows, or macOS, just open convertio.co and convert.

Do I need to pay to convert JP2 to PAM?

Basic conversions are free — no account required. Convertio also offers premium tiers for users who need higher throughput or larger inputs.

How long does JP2 to PAM conversion take?

Most conversions finish within seconds. Processing time depends on image size and server load, but JP2 to PAM is typically very quick.