Title: Television
1Television
2Simplified TV System
3Simplified TV System
- The aural or sound transmitter is an FM system
similar to broadcast FM radio.
- The video, or picture, signal is
amplitude-modulated onto a carrier.
- Thus, the composite transmitted signal is a
combination of both AM and FM principles.
-
4Transmitter Principles
- The TV camera converts a visual picture or scene
into an electrical signal. The camera is thus a
transducer between light energy and electrical
energy. - At the receiver, the CRT picture tube is the
analogous transducer that converts the electrical
energy back into light energy.
5Transmitter Principles
- The microphone and speaker are the similarly
related transducers for the sound transmission.
- There are actually two more transducers, the
sending and receiving antennas. They convert
between electrical energy and the electromagnetic
energy required for transmission through the
atmosphere.
6Transmitter Principles
- The diplexer feeding the transmitter antenna
feeds both the visual and aural signals to the
antenna while not allowing either to be fed back
into the other transmitter. - Without the diplexer, the low-output impedance of
either transmitter's power amplifier would
dissipate much of the output power of the other
transmitter.
7Transmitter Principles TV Cameras
- The most widely used image pickup device is the
charge couple device (CCD). CCD cameras are used
in many applications such as broadcasting and
imaging. - The CCD is a solid-state chip consisting of
thousands or millions of photosensitive cells
arranged in a two-dimensional array. When light
(photons) strike the CCD surface, the light
information is converted to an electronic analog
of the light. The electronic information is then
shifted out of the device serially in what is
call a bucket brigade.
8Transmitter Principles TV Cameras
9Transmitter Principles - Scanning
10Transmitter Principles - Scanning
- In this simplified system, the camera focuses the
letter "T' onto the photosensitive cells in the
CCD imaging device.
- Instead of a million cells, this system has just
30, arranged in 6 rows with 5 cells per row.
- Each separate area is called a pixel, which is
short for "picture element." The greater the
number of pixels, the better the quality (or
resolution) of the transmitted picture.
11Transmitter Principles - Scanning
- The letter "T" is focused on the light-sensitive
area so that all of rows 1 and 6 are
illuminated.
- All of row 2 is dark and the centers of rows 3,4,
and 5 are dark.
- If we scan each row sequentially and if the
retrace time is essentially zero, then we have a
sequential breakup of information.
- The retrace interval is the time it takes to move
from the end of one line back to the start of the
next lower line.
12Transmitter Principles - Scanning
- The variable light on the photosensitive cells
results in a similar variable voltage being
developed at the CCD's output.
- The visual scene has been converted to a video
(electrical) signal and can now be suitably
amplified and used to amplitude- modulate a
carrier for broadcast. - The picture for broadcast National Television
Systems Committee (NTSC) TV has been standardized
at a 43 ratio of the width to height. This is
termed the aspect ratio and was selected as the
most pleasing picture orientation to the human
eye.
13Transmitter/Receiver Synchronization
- When the video signal is detected at the
receiver, some means of synchronizing the
transmitter and receiver is necessary
- 1. When the TV camera starts scanning line 1, the
receiver must also start scanning line 1 on the
CRT output display. You do not want the top of a
scene appearing at the center of the TV screen. - 2. The speed that the transmitter scans each line
must be exactly duplicated by the receiver
scanning process to avoid distortion in the
receiver output. - 3. The horizontal retrace, or time when the
electron beam is returned back to the left-hand
side to start tracing a new line, must occur
coincidentally at both transmitter and receiver.
You do not want the horizontal lines starting at
the center of the TV screen. - 4. When a complete set of horizontal lines has
been scanned, moving the electron beam from the
end of the bottom line to the start of the top
line (vertical flyback or retrace) must occur
simultaneously at both transmitter and receiver.
14Transmitter/Receiver Synchronization
- In the scanning process for a television, the
electron beam starts at the upper left-hand comer
and sweeps horizontally to the right side.
- It then is rapidly returned to the left side, and
this interval is termed horizontal retrace.
- An appropriate analogy to this process is the
movement of your eye as you read this line and
rapidly retrace to the left and drop slightly for
the next line.
15Transmitter/Receiver Synchronization
- When all the horizontal lines have been traced,
the electron beam must move from the lower
right-hand corner up to the upper left-hand
corner for the next "picture." - This vertical retrace interval is analogous to
the time it takes the eye to move from the bottom
of one page to the top of the next.
16Horizontal Synchronization
17Horizontal Synchronization
- The Transmitter send a synchronization (sync)
pulse between every line of video signal so that
perfect transmitter-receiver synchronization is
maintained. - Three horizontal sync pulses are shown along with
the video signal for two lines.
- The actual horizontal sync pulse rides on top of
a so-called blanking pulse, as shown in the
figure. The blanking pulse is a strong enough
signal so that the electron beam retrace at the
receiver is blacked out and thus invisible to the
viewer.
18Horizontal Synchronization
- The interval before the horizontal sync pulse
appears on the blanking pulse is termed the front
porch, while the interval after the end of the
sync pulse, but before the end of the blanking
pulse, is called the back porch. - Notice that the back porch includes an
eight-cycle sine-wave burst at 3,579,545 Hz. It
is appropriately called the color burst, because
it is used to calibrate the receiver color
subcarrier generator. - Naturally enough, a black-and-white broadcast
does not include the color burst.
19Horizontal Synchronization
- The two lines of video picture signal shown in
the figure can be described as follows
- Line 2 It starts out nearly full black at the
left-hand side and gradually lightens to full
white at the right-hand side.
- Line 4 It starts out medium gray and stays there
until one-third of the way over, when it
gradually becomes black at the picture center. It
suddenly shifts to white and gradually turns
darker gray at the right-hand side.
20Vertical Synchronization
21The Television Signal
- The maximum modulating rate for the video signal
is 4 MHz.
- Because it is amplitude-modulated onto a carrier,
a bandwidth of 8 MHz is implied.
- However, the FCC allows only a 6-MHz bandwidth
per TV station, and that must also include the FM
audio signal (only is a relative term here
because 6 MHz is enough to contain 600 AM radio
broadcast stations of 10 kHz each).
22The Television Signal
23The Television Signal
24The Television Signal
- The lower visual sideband extends only 0.25 MHz
below its carrier with the remainder filtered
out.
- The upper sideband is transmitted in full.
- The audio carrier is 4.5 MHz above the picture
carrier with FM sidebands as created by its
25-kHz deviation.
25Principle of Colour Television
26Principle of Colour Television
- The colour camera scan scene in unison, with red,
green and blue colour content separated into
three different signals.
- This process is accomplished within the camera.
- The lens focuses the scene onto a beam splitter
that feeds three separate light filters.
27Principle of Colour Television
28Principle of Colour Television
- Color receiver CRTs are a marvel of engineering
precision.
- They are made up of triads of red, blue, and
green phosphor dots.
- The trick is to get the proper electron beam to
strike its respective colored phosphor dot. This
is accomplished by passing the three beams
through a single hole in the shadow mask, as
shown in the figure. - The shadow mask prevents the "red" beam from
spilling over onto an adjacent blue or green
phosphor dot, which would certainly destroy
colour rendition.
29Digital Television
- The DTV standard is based on the standard
recommendations by the Advanced Television System
Committee (ATSC).
- This standard provides for the transmission of
television programs in the HDTV screen format, 16
X 9, as shown the figure.
- It also provides for the transmission of a
standard definition television (SDTV) format that
provides a digital picture with comparable
resolution to analog NTSC formats.
30Digital Television
31Digital Television
- The format typically used to convert the analog
video to a digital format is the ITU- R. 601
422 format. This is an international standard
for digitizing component video. - The base sampling frequency for the ITU-R 601
standard is 3.375 MHz. The 422 represents the
sample rate for the following elements of a
component video signal. - luminance Y red-luminance R-Y and
blue-luminance B-Y
32Digital Television
- A video signal is composed of green, red, and
blue components.
- In addition to providing green color information,
the green channel provides the luminance
information. Luminance is the black-and-white
detail. - The R- Y and B- Y values provide the
color-difference values.
- These components, the Y, R- Y, and B- Y, are then
converted to a digital signal using a PCM
technique. The base sample rate for the ITU-R 601
standard is 3.375 MHz, and 10-bit sampling is
used. - This means that the luminance channel is sampled
at four times the base rate, and the R- Y and B-
Y channels are sampled at two times the base
rate.
33Digital Television
- The three digital samples (Y, R- Y, and B- Y) are
time-division-multiplexed together with a
resulting serial data bit rate of 270 Mbps.
- This data rate must undergo some form of data
compression so that the data will fit into the
6-MHz bandwidth available for broadcast
television. The video-compression technique
selected for DTV transmissions is MPEG2. (MPEG is
an abbreviation for the Motion Pictures Expert
Group.) - The compression techniques rely on the
redundancies in the video signal.
34Digital Television
35Digital Television
- The digital compression technique specified for
digital television, as defined by ATSC document
N/52, details the digital audio compression
(AC-3) standard developed by Dolby Laboratories.
- This system provides five full-bandwidth audio
channels (3 Hz to 20 kHz). The five channels are
for the left, center, right, and left-right
surround-sound channels. - The standard also provides one low-frequency
enhancement channel, which has a reduced
bandwidth (3 Hz to 120 Hz).
36Digital Television
- The new audio system is commercially called the
5.1 Channel Input.
- The standard provides for various sample rates
and input word lengths (up to 24 bits) for
compatibility to the many available digital audio
encoding formats. - The six audio outputs are multiplexed together,
which results in a 5.184-Mbps data stream. This
data stream is then compressed to a 3S4-kbps data
stream.