Digital broadcasting is the sending of a digital signal through a common
channel to a group of users that may be capable of decoding some or all of the broadcast
information.
Digital Television (DTV) is a method of transferring video images and their
audio components through digital transmission. There are several formats used
for DTV including high quality digital MPEG and 28.8 video.
Digital video is the sending of a sequence of picture signals (frames) that are
represented by binary data (bits) that describe a finite set of color and
luminance levels. Sending a digital video picture involves the conversion of a
scanned image to digital information that is transferred to a digital video
receiver. The digital information contains characteristics of the video signal
and the position of the image (bit location) that will be displayed. Digital
television continues to send information in the form of frames and pixels. The
major difference is the frames and pixels are represented by digital
information instead of a continuously varying analog signal.
The first digital television broadcast license for the United States
was issued to a Hawaiian television station in September 1997. Digital
television sends the video signal in digital modulated form. Ironically, many
television signals have been captured and stored in digital form for over 10
years. To transmit these digital video signals, they must first be converted to
standard analog television (NTSC or PAL) to be transmitted through analog
transmission systems and to reach analog televisions.
When digital transmission is used, most digital video systems use some form of
data compression. Data compression involves the characterization of a single
picture into its components. For example, if the picture was a view of the blue
sky, this could be characterized by a small number of data bits that indicate
the color (blue) and the starting corner and ending corner. This may require
under 10 bytes of information. When this digital information is received, it
will create a blue box that may contain over 7,200 pixels. With a color
picture, this would have required several thousand bytes of information for
only 1 picture.
In addition to the data compression used on one picture (one frame), digital
compression allows the comparison between frames. This allows the repeating of
sections of a previous frame. For example, a single frame may be a picture of
city with many buildings. This is a very complex picture and data compression
will not be able to be as efficient as the blue sky example above. However, the
next frame will be another picture of the city with only a few changes. The
data compression can send only the data that has changed between frames.
Digital television broadcasting that uses video compression technology allows
for “multicasting” (simultaneously sending) several “standard definition”
television channels (normally up to five channels) in the same bandwidth as a
standard analog television channel. Unfortunately, high definition digital
television channels require a much higher data transmission rate and it is
likely that only a single HDTV channel can be sent on a digital television
channel.
Figure 1 demonstrates the operation of the basic digital video compression
system. Each video frame is digitized and then sent for digital compression.
The digital compression process creates a sequence frames (images) that start
with a key frame. The key frame is digitized and used as reference points for
the compression process. Between the key frames, only the differences in images
are transmitted. This dramatically reduces the data transmission rate to
represent a digital video signal as an uncompressed digital video signal
requires over 50 Mbps compared to less than 4 Mbps for a typical digital video
disk (DVD) digital video signal.
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