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High-Definition Television
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High-Definition Television
The NTSC standard was created in the 1930s, for black-and-white television transmissions. Color was added to it in 1953, after four years of testing. NTSC stands for National Television Standards Committee. This is a standard that specifies the shape of the signal sent by a television transmitter. The signal is analog, with amplitude that goes up and down during each scan line in response to the black and white parts of the line. Color was later added to this standard, but it had to be added such that blackand- white television sets would be able to display the color signal in black and white. The result was phase modulation of the black-and-white carrier, a kludge (television engineers call it NSCT “never the same color twice”).
With the explosion of computers and digital equipment in the last two decades came the realization that a digital signal is a better, more reliable way of sending images over the air. In such a signal the image is sent pixel by pixel, where each pixel is represented by a number specifying its color. The digital signal is still a wave, but the amplitude of the wave no longer represents the image. Rather, the wave is modulated to carry binary information. The term modulation means that something in the wave is modified to distinguish between the zeros and ones being sent. An FM digital signal, for example, modifies (modulates) the frequency of the wave. This type of wave uses one frequency to represent a binary zero and another to represent a one. The DTV (Digital TV) standard uses a modulation technique called 8-VSB (for vestigial sideband), which provides robust and reliable terrestrial transmission. The 8-VSB modulation technique allows for a broad coverage area, reduces interference with existing analog broadcasts, and is itself immune from interference.
History of DTV:
The Advanced Television Systems Committee (ATSC), established in 1982, is an international organization developing technical standards for advanced video systems. Even though these standards are voluntary, they are generally adopted by the ATSC members and other manufacturers. There are currently about eighty ATSC member companies and organizations, which represent the many facets of the television, computer, telephone, and motion picture industries. The ATSC Digital Television Standard adopted by the United States Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is based on a design by the Grand Alliance (a coalition of electronics manufacturers and research institutes) that was a finalist in the first round of DTV proposals under the FCC’s Advisory Committee on Advanced Television Systems (ACATS). The ACATS is composed of representatives of the computer, broadcasting, telecommunications, manufacturing, cable television, and motion picture industries. Its mission is to assist in the adoption of an HDTV transmission standard and to promote the rapid implementation of HDTV in the U.S.
The ACATS announced an open competition: Anyone could submit a proposed HDTV standard, and the best system would be selected as the new television standard for the United States. To ensure fast transition to HDTV, the FCC promised that every television station in the nation would be temporarily lent an additional channel of broadcast spectrum.
The ACATS worked with the ATSC to review the proposed DTV standard, and gave its approval to final specifications for the various parts—audio, transport, format, compression, and transmission. The ATSC documented the system as a standard, and ACATS adopted the Grand Alliance system in its recommendation to the FCC in late 1995. In late 1996, corporate members of the ATSC had reached an agreement on the DTV standard (Document A/53) and asked the FCC to approve it. On December 31, 1996, the FCC formally adopted every aspect of the ATSC standard except for the video formats. These video formats nevertheless remain a part of the ATSC standard, and are expected to be used by broadcasters and by television manufacturers in the foreseeable future.
HDTV Specifications:
The NTSC standard in use since the 1930s specifies an interlaced image composed of 525 lines where the odd numbered lines (1, 3, 5, . . .) are drawn on the screen first, followed by the even numbered lines (2, 4, 6, . . .). The two fields are woven together and drawn in 1/30 of a second, allowing for 30 screen refreshes each second. In contrast, a noninterlaced picture displays the entire image at once. This progressive scan type of image is what’s used by today’s computer monitors. The digital television sets that have been available since mid 1998 use an aspect ratio of 16/9 and can display both the interlaced and progressive-scan images in several different resolutions—one of the best features of digital video. These formats include 525-line progressive-scan (525P), 720-line progressive-scan (720P), 1050-line progressivescan (1050P), and 1080-interlaced (1080I), all with square pixels. Our present, analog, television sets cannot deal with the new, digital signal broadcast by television stations, but inexpensive converters will be available (in the form of a small box that can comfortably sit on top of a television set) to translate the digital signals to analog ones (and lose image information in the process). The NTSC standard calls for 525 scan lines and an aspect ratio of 4/3. This implies 4 3 ×525 = 700 pixels per line, yielding a total of 525×700 = 367,500 pixels on the screen. (This is the theoretical total, since only 483 lines are actually visible.) In comparison, a DTV format calling for 1080 scan lines and an aspect ratio of 16/9 is equivalent to 1920 pixels per line, bringing the total number of pixels to 1080 × 1920 = 2,073,600, about 5.64 times more than the NTSC interlaced standard.
In addition to the 1080 × 1920 DTV format, the ATSC DTV standard calls for a lower-resolution format with just 720 scan lines, implying 16 9 × 720 = 1280 pixels per line. Each of these resolutions can be refreshed at one of three different rates: 60 frames/second (for live video) and 24 or 30 frames/second (for material originally produced on film). The refresh rates can be considered temporal resolution. The result is a total of six different formats. Table 6.7 summarizes the screen capacities and the necessary transmission rates of the six formats. With high-resolution and 60 frames per second the transmitter must be able to send 124,416,000 bits/sec (about 14.83 Mbyte/sec), which is why this format uses compression. (It uses MPEG-2. Other video formats can also use this compression method.) The fact that DTV can have different spatial and temporal resolutions allows for tradeoffs. Certain types of video material (such as fastmoving horse- or car races) may look better at high refresh rates even with low spatial resolution, while other material (such as museum-quality paintings) should ideally be watched in high resolution even with low refresh rates.
Digital Television (DTV) is a broad term encompassing all types of digital transmission. HDTV is a subset of DTV indicating 1080 scan lines. Another type of DTV is standard definition television (SDTV), which has picture quality slightly better than a good analog picture. (SDTV has resolution of 640×480 at 30 frames/sec and an aspect ratio of 4:3.) Since generating an SDTV picture requires fewer pixels, a broadcasting station will be able to transmit multiple channels of SDTV within its 6 MHz allowed frequency range. HDTV also incorporates Dolby Digital sound technology to bring together a complete presentation.
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