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TV Technology

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Title: TV Technology


1
TV Technology
  • DSIM Week 7

2
Lecture Outcomes
  • Light and The Eye
  • TV Global standards PAL, NTSC, Secam
  • Interlaced and Progressive scan images
  • The TV signal
  • Sampling explained
  • Video Compression (colour subsampling)
  • High Definition Video

3
What is Light?
  • Light is made up of different wavelengths of
    energy.
  • Colour we see falls into the bracket of the
    visible spectrum.
  • Red has the longest wavelength and blue has the
    shortest.

4
Light Theory
  • White light is actually made from a mixture of
    full red, full green and full blue wavelengths as
    shown below.
  • RGB can make all colours in the visible spectrum.
    Mixing pairs of the primary colours makes the
    secondary colours (cyan, magenta and yellow).

5
How We See Light The Eye
  • Light is gathered through the pupil and focused
    by the lens onto the retina.
  • The retina is covered in light sensitive cells
    called rods and cones.
  • Tiny electrical pulses are sent down the optical
    nerve to the brain where they are assembled into
    an image.

6
How The Eye Deals Detects Light
  • 95 of the retina is made of rods and are
    sensitive to luminance (brightness/intensity/black
    or white info) and work at low light levels
    only.
  • 5 of the retina is made of cones that are
    sensitive to chrominance (colour) and work in
    only good light levels.
  • This is why in darkness we see black and white
    and edges.

7
The Eye
  • There three cones are all sensitive to a
    different wavelengths of light.
  • We have cones sensitive to red, green and blue
    light.
  • We are most sensitive to green, less to red and
    even less to blue.
  • We actually see 60 green, 29 red and 11 blue
  • All video devices work on the same principles as
    the eye and because we are least sensitive to
    colour. This is where the most compression is
    used. This is explained more further on in this
    presentation.

8
TV Display Basics
  • The television lights up by thousands of tiny
    dots of phosphors with 3 high-energy beams of
    electrons.
  • In most systems, there are three phosphor colours
    -- red, green and blue -- which are evenly
    distributed on the screen.
  • By combining these colours in different
    proportions, the television can produce the
    entire colour spectrum.

9
What Colour Systems do Cameras and TVs use?
  • Standard televisions use 8bit RGB colour
  • A low to mid range video camera uses 8bit RGB
    too.
  • A top end camera uses 10bit RGB (like our studio
    cameras and digital betacam)

10
How a Camera deals with light
  • RGB is split via a prism onto its corresponding
    CCD
  • The data sent to a colour matrix where it is
    converted into luminance and chrominance.

11
The CCD charge coupled device
  • They come in 2 sizes
  • 2/3 inch CCDs (high end broadcast cameras)
  • 1/3 inch CCDs (DV cameras)
  • 2/3in have more photoreceptors per chip (average
    about 400,000). Less than half a megapixel. You
    could state this is the DPI of the CCD.
  • 1/3in average about 200,000 to 330,330. About a ¼
    of a megapixel in digital camera terms.

12
Global TV Standards and Frames Sizes
13
Global TV Standards - NTSC
  • NTSC TV
  • National Television Standards Committee
  • Used in North and Central America and Japan
  • 525 lines of horizontal resolution
  • Runs at 60Hz of vertical frequency (60 cycles per
    sec) at 110 volts of AC

14
Global TV Standards - SECAM
  • SECAM
  • Sequential Couleur Avec Memoireor Sequential
    Colour with Memory
  • Used in France, Iran and Iraq to name a few
  • 625 lines of horizontal resolution
  • Runs at 50Hz of vertical frequency (50 cycles per
    sec) at 220 volts of AC
  • Adopted in 1967

15
Global TV Standards - PAL
  • PAL TV
  • Phase Alternative Line
  • A German invented system
  • Used in most of Europe, Africa, Australia, and
    South America
  • 625 lines of horizontal resolution
  • Runs at 50Hz of vertical frequency (50 cycles per
    sec) at 220 volts of AC

16
Global Electricity Standards
  • Australia 230V 50 Hz
  • Canada 120V 60 Hz
  • France 230V 50 Hz
  • Hong Kong 220V 50 Hz
  • Japan 100V 50 Hz (Eastern Japan)
  • Japan 100V 60 Hz (Western Japan)
  • Mexico 127V 60 Hz
  • Singapore 230V 50 Hz
  • South Africa 220 / 230V 50 Hz
  • USA 120V 60 Hz
  • United Arab Emirates 220V 50 Hz
  • http//kropla.com/electric2.htm

17
Standard Definition TV Frame Sizes
  • What frame size is an analogue PAL TV image?

768 x 576
What frame size is a digital PAL TV image?
720 x 576
A Pal TV runs at how many individual images per
second?
25
A NTSC TV runs at how many images per second?
29.97 its common to round it up to 30fps
18
Whats Better PAL or NTSC?
19
Pal V NTSC data rate per frame comparison
  • PAL is 25fps whilst NTSC is 30fps
  • NTSC and PAL have the same date rate per second
    but why is PAL better quality?
  • Well the data per frame is 20 higher than NTSC

This is not all too see the next slide
20
Pal V NTSC lines of resolution
  • Pal has 625 individual lines making up the 25
    frames.
  • NTSC has 525 individual lines making up the 30
    frames.
  • So per frame PAL has 100 more lines of vertical
    resolution per frame (or 16 more).

So PAL has 16.7 more data per frame and 16 more
vertical resolution per frame than NTSC.
21
What happens when NTSC and PAL are transferred to
Film?
  • Film 24fps NTSC is 30fps PAL is 25fps
  • NTSC needs a 20 reduction (24/30x10080 or 20
    less) in the numbers of frames. So 6 frames per
    second are dropped.
  • PAL needs a 4 reduction (24/25x10096 or 4)
    and so drops just one frame per second.
  • So whats better for video to film transfer?

PAL OF COURSE!!! Remember PAL has 16 more data
per frame too
22
Interlacing and Progressive Scanningexplained
23
Interlaced Scanning
  • The image is made up of 625 individual lines and
    therefore the TV set draws 15,625 lines per
    second (625x25)

24
Interlaced Scanning
  • Half of the 625 lines are drawn first. This is
    called field 1.
  • The first field draws is called the odd field as
    it draws the odd numbers 1,3,5,7, etc
  • The second half of the lines are called field 2
    and this draws the even numbered lines 2,4,6,8
    etc
  • This is also called 50i recording, for 50
    interlaced images per second.
  • Field 1 and Field 2 1 Frame

25
Interlaced TV Image
26
Progressive Scan
  • A progressive scan draws each of the scan lines
    one after another in numerical order e.g.
    1,2,3.625
  • This gives a sharper image that an interlaced
    image.
  • This is called 25p recording.
  • There are no fields in a progressive scan just a
    single frame.

27
Progressive Scan (De-interlaced image a field
removed)
28
(No Transcript)
29
InterlacedScan
Progressive Scan
30
25p Cameras
  • The Panasonic AXG DV100 can record a 25p image.
    How does it do this?
  • It only records the first field and then copies
    this to the second field.
  • Progressive scan images are sharper and clearer
    because the are full frame scans.
  • These cameras produce a higher quality image than
    the Canon XL1s because the CCDs have more
    photosensors per chip.
  • You can use these in third year.

31
To understand this you need to understand what a
single scan line is and how it works.
You now understand how a TV draws a picture but
how can a waveform make a TV picture?
32
Scan Line TV Signal
  • This is an electronic signal for one scan line
    of a single TV picture.

33
TV Signal
  • The signal contains all the
  • luminance information
  • the colour info
  • the retracing information

34
Scan Line TV Signal
  • The majority of this signal is the luminance
    (brightness/intensity) level of the picture that
    the TV is drawing.
  • The colour information is also combined into this
    signal in the colour burst.

Key Back PorchThe area of a composite video
signal defined as the time between the end of the
colour burst and the start of active video. Also
loosely used to mean the total time from the
rising edge of sync to the start of active
video. Front PorchThe area of a composite video
waveform between the end of the active video and
the leading edge of sync.
35
Active Video
  • The active video signal is a waveform that shows
    the brightness/intensity level of the picture.
  • The lowest level represents a black or very dark
    image. This is a 0.5 volt signal.
  • The highest level represents white and is the
    maximum brightness. This is a 2v signal.
  • A waveform in this area will be continually
    rising and failing depending on the image it is
    drawing unless its a white picture or a black
    picture.

36
Question
  • For a single scan line of video draw the graph
    which would represent the varying voltage of the
    image below.

37
Sync Tip / Horizontal Retrace
  • The sync tip or horizontal retrace is what tells
    the electron beam to end the current scan
    (picture) line its drawing and move back to the
    left hand side of the screen to start to draw the
    next line.

38
Colour burst
  • The colour information is added to the luminance
    signal.
  • It is a sine wave with the different colours
    being identified by the phase difference between
    it and the colour burst reference signal.

39
What is In Phase and out of Phase
40
Phases changed explained
  • The top and bottom sine wave are out of phase.
  • The top signal is the reference signal e.g the
    starting signal.
  • Depending on what degree out of phase the colour
    signal is determines the electronics in the TV
    drawn a different colour,.

41
Colour Burst
  • Depending on how out of phase the colour signal
    is compared to the reference signal a different
    colour will be drawn.

Notice the colours are RGB (primary) and Cyan,
Magenta and Yellow (secondary)
42
Colour bars
  • Why use colour bars?
  • They are used for matching the output of two
    cameras in a multi-camera shoot and to set up a
    video monitor. They are made up from the primary
    and secondary colours.

43
Recording Signals through Sampling
  • How does sampling a signal actually work?
  • Sampling is the process used to convert an
    analogue signal into its electrical and
    equivalent.
  • Recording devices translate sound or light into a
    voltage.
  • The decimal number recorded is then converted
    into its binary (0 and 1s) equivalent. This is
    called analogue to digital conversion.

44
Sampling Made Simple
  • To reproduce this signal we have sampled it at 4
    sample points.
  • We have a 1 signal split into 8 possible voltage
    points.
  • Whats the bit depth of this scale?
  • 238
  • We amount of times per second we sample is called
    the frequency. In this case its 4 or correctly
    termed 4Hz

45
Sample Plot Table
46
What happens when we reproduce this waveform from
the sampled points?
As you can see with such a low sampling frequency
the waveform cannot be accurately reproduced.
47
How could we reproduce the signal accurately?
  • Increase bit depth and increase the sampling
    frequency
  • CD quality audio is sampled at 44100 times per
    second at a bit depth of 16bit (65536 levels to
    break up the 1 voltage)
  • This means a very accurate signal can be
    reproduced.
  • The voltages recorded at then converted into
    digital numbers (binary 0s and 1s) and stored.

48
What rate is Video Sampled?
  • Video is sampled at these following rates
  • 444 at 10bit Latest Sony FDW 9500 and Thompson
    Viper only
  • 422 at 10 bit Our Studio Camera / Digital
    Betacam
  • 411 at 8 bit NTSC DV cameras
  • 420 at 8 bit PAL DV Cameras
  • This is called Colour Subsamping

49
What does 422 actually mean?
  • Firstly, this is a ratio
  • The first 4 represents the luminance and is said
    to be sampled at fully.
  • The 22 are the colour components (red and blue)
  • The second number is the red component and is
    sampled at half the rate of the luminance
  • The third number is the blue component and is
    sampled at half the rate of the luminance.
  • The luminance video sampling frequency is
    actually sampled at 13.5Mhz (13.5 million times
    per second)
  • The colour is therefore half of 13.5Mhz 6.75

50
What does this result in?
  • Already you only have 50 of the colour being
    sampled compared to black and white info.
  • Why? Well are eyes are less sensitive to colour
    (remember 95 of our vision is b/w)
  • What are the effects?
  • Less detail in the colour grading of shadows and
    less tints.

51
More 422
  • However, remember 422 is 10bit.
  • So there are 1024 shades of RGB coming off the
    cameras image recording device (CCD). This does
    reproduce very accurate colour.
  • On the downside Film can be said to be 444
    because it is uncompressed and does not do
    selective sampling like video.

52
What does 411mean?
  • Remember this is 411 at 8 bit
  • Luminance is fully sampled
  • Red and blue is sampled at a quarter of the rate
    of luminance.
  • So already you only have 25 of the colour being
    sampled on each of the scan lines.
  • Thats 13.5Mhz sampling on the luminance, and
    3.75MHz on the colour.
  • 411 cameras are used for NTSC TV only
  • There are only 256 shades of RGB too as its 8
    bit!
  • So what are the knock on effects? Well its not
    good to do a chroma-key with a 411 as theres
    hardly any colour!

53
What does 420 mean?
  • Remember this is 420 at 8 bit
  • Luminance (y) is sampled fully
  • What does the 20 part mean?
  • Well, the red and blue are sampled at half the
    resolution of the luminance.
  • But only the red content is sampled on field 1.
    Blue is sampled on Field 2.
  • So Y is sampled at 13.5Mhz and red and blue are
    sampled at 6.75Mhz but alternating between red
    and blue depending on the field.

54
420 continued
  • All DV cameras (Canon and Panasonic) are 420 at
    8 bit
  • There are only 256 shades of RGB too as its 8
    bit!.
  • So what are the knock on effects? Well its not
    good to do a chroma-key with a 420 as theres
    hardly any colour!
  • Theres more too! DV Cameras also include more
    compression 51 too so the 25 of colour I
    compressed 5 times more so reducing the colour to
    6 of the original.

55
Lets look at the Data Rate
  • The uncompressed data rate of video can be worked
    out by the following equation.
  • Image size (width x height) x colour bit depth x
    frames per second
  • 720x576 x 24 x 25 248000000B/s or 248Mb/s
  • The 24 is made up from 3 colour channels of 8
    bits each
  • 720 x 576 is the frame size for digital TV
  • 25 is the PAL frame rate

56
What about 422?
  • This is worked out slightly differently.

57
422 continued
  • 422 compression is generally always 10bit. It
    is quoted in the technical spec of the cameras
    running at 277MB/s.
  • Where the extra info come from?
  • Well, It has 4 channels of 16bit 48K Audio
  • It also has massive amount of error correction
    added to ensure all the 0s and 1s are
    transmitted and can reproduced correctly in the
    right order. As it is SDI connection and not
    firewire (serial digital interface)
  • All the data (video and audio) is pushes down one
    cable. This pushes the totally uncompressed data
    rate to 554MB/s.
  • Sony Digital Betacam of 422 is quoted to be
    compressed 21. The 554MB/s is compressed to
    277MB/s.

58
420 at 8bit Data rate
This is DV compression. It is then compressed a
further 51 making the data rate 25MBs.
59
To Wrap up Compression
  • 422 10bit has a higher sampling frequency than
    420
  • A higher bit depth (4 times as many shades of
    RGB) and therefore higher data rate.
  • 422 use less compression after the colour
    subsampling.
  • 422 cameras also have 2/3 of inch size CCD
    instead of 1/3 on 420 cameras so more light is
    recordable too.
  • Also they have more photoreceptors on the CCDs so
    a higher dot per inch too.

60
Colour in Cameras
  • With all the knowledge of video compression now
    you should understand that colour is the heavily
    compressed.
  • Only studio cameras or 422 cameras should be
    used for chromakey.

61
  • What happens when you shoot on the studio cameras
    and record to mini dv?
  • Is there any point?
  • Yes Why when Mini DV is 420.
  • Its like by passing the problems of the XL1 lens
    and CCDs.
  • Bigger CCDs, more photosensors per chip so
    higher quality images.

62
The Canon XL2
  • The Canon XL2 is the latest Canon camera
  • It has 3x 1/3" true 169 with 800.000 pixels per
    CCD
  • Thats 3 or 4 times higher than the XL1 and twice
    as many as the Panasonic AXG DV100.
  • Also has a 50i 25p frame rate
  • XLR connectors built in

63
The Future - High Definition
64
HDTV - What is it?
  • High Definition TV
  • Some of the basic features of HDTV are
  • Higher picture clarity
  • Larger pictures
  • More colours (5 times the resolution of normal
    standard definition TV sampling at 13.5Mhz x 5
    67.5million samples per second at full
    resolution)
  • Wider pictures (all 169)
  • Multi-channel digital CD quality sound

65
Broadcasting HD - TV
  • Starting in UK in late 2006 on the Sky network
    using the European 720p standard.
  • BBC intends to produce all content in HD by 2010

66
Show the HD IMAGES
67
What Video Formats are High Definition
  • Sonys HDCAM 422 at 10bit and 444 RGB with
    2.2megapixel CCDs
  • Panasonic DVCPro HD 422 at 8 bit with
    1Megapixel CCDs
  • Thompson Viper 444 at 10bit with 9.2megapixel
    CCDs
  • Sony HDV (the HD for the DV market) 420 at 8
    bit.
  • JVC HDV

68
How does it work?
  • It uses intra frame (within the frame)
    compression but no inter frame.
  • It uses 25 I-frames per second

69
Is HD interlaced or Progressive Scan?
Its both
70
High Definition TV Frame Sizes
  • What is the maximum frame size of HDCAM?

1920 X 1080i
What frame size is a Panasonic DVCPROHD?
1280 x 720p
A Pal TV runs at how many individual images per
second?
25
A NTSC TV runs at how many images per second?
29.97 its common to round it up to 30fps
IInterlaced scan PProgressive scan
71
HDV High Definition Digital Video
72
HDV Cameras
  • HDV is an entry-level HD format which is ideally
    suited to videographers, low-budget filmmakers
    and corporate or institutional productions.
  • Uses an MPEG-2 video format and MPEG-1 audio
    layer 2 running at 384kbps (48K 16bit)
  • It allows HD pictures to be captured on a mini dv
    tape.
  • A down converter to standard def is also
    featured.

True 169 CCD Frame Sizes 1440x1080i or
1280x720p
73
HDV MPEG-2 Versus DV
25MBs DV Intra-frame formats
MPEG-2 Encoding
74
How Does HDV work?
  • HDV uses an MPEG-2 Transport stream as its data
    file
  • What is an MPEG-2?
  • A highly efficient compression format used in
    digital television, DVD-video and now HDV
    camcorders
  • It runs at a data rate of 25MBs at 1080i or
    19MBs at 720p
  • It uses interframe compression

75
HDV MPEG-2 compares to traditional video formats
The B and P frames are mathematically calculated
based upon the main I frame. The inbetween
frames record changes in movement only and not
the repeated information. The HDV format runs at
19-25Mbps, it needs the highly efficient MPEG-2
to put HD size images on to Mini DV tape.
76
What is compression looking for?
  • Repetition in information.
  • The following sentence has repetition
  • The cat sat on the mat.
  • The word the is repeated twice
  • Instead of copying the word twice you copy it
    once and then create a reference point that
    states use the word the again.
  • This information is called redundancy and it is
    removed in compression.
  • The core and essential information is called the
    entropy.
  • Removing the one word from this sentence reduces
    the data amount by 17.
  • (This is called lossless encoding as all the
    original sentence can be perfectly recreated
    data)

77
Problems with HDV
  • HDV is a pain for an editor why?

Its very CPU intensive as the MPEG has to be
uncompressed into 25fps, create the effect like
transition and them recompress to MPEG-2. The
HDV format runs in MPEG -2 all the time unless
you choose to uncompress to add an edit or a
effect.
  • Will this effect the quality?

Mmm maybe not sure until we can test it
78
Conclusion
  • PAL and NTSC Standards
  • Interlacing and Progressive scanning
  • A scan line TV Signal
  • Phases
  • Colour burst
  • Active image
  • Sampling and resolutions
  • Wheres as the colour gone (Colour Sub Sampling)
  • 444 compression
  • 422 compression
  • 420 compression
  • High Definition Camera Technology
  • HDV Camera Technology

79
Glossary
  • Interlaced ScanThe process whereby each frame of
    a picture is created by first scanning half of
    the lines and then scanning the second set of
    lines, which are interleaved between the first to
    complete the picture. Each half is referred to as
    a field. Two fields make a frame.
  • IREAn arbitrary unit of measurement equal to
    1/100 of the excursion from blanking to reference
    white level. In NTSC systems, 100 IRE equals
    714mV and 1-volt p-p equals 140 IRE.
  • LumaThe monochrome or black-and-white portion of
    a video signal. This term is sometimes
    incorrectly called "luminance," which refers to
    the actual displayed brightness
  • NTSCNational Television Systems Committee. A
    group that established black-and-white television
    standards in the United States in 1941 and later
    added colour in 1953. NTSC is used to refer to
    the systems and signals compatible with this
    specific colour-modulation technique
  • PALPhase alternate line. PAL is used to refer to
    systems and signals that are compatible with this
    specific modulation technique.
  • Progressive ScanThe process whereby a picture is
    created by scanning all of the lines of a frame
    in one pass
  • Interlaced ScanThe process whereby each frame of
    a picture is created by first scanning half of
    the lines and then scanning the second set of
    lines, which are interleaved between the first to
    complete the picture. Each half is referred to as
    a field. Two fields make a frame
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