Some of the key technologies used in CATV systems include analog video.
Analog Video
Analog video contains a rapidly changing signal (analog) that represents cthe
luminance and color information of a video picture. Sending a video picture
involves the creation and transfer of a sequence of individual still pictures
called frames. Each frame is divided into horizontal and vertical lines. To
create a single frame picture on a television set, the frame is drawn line by
line. The process of drawing these lines on the screen is called scanning. The
frames are drawn to the screen in two separate scans. The first scan draws half
of the picture and the second scan draws between the lines of the first scan.
This scanning method is called interlacing. Each line is divided into pixels
that are the smallest possible parts of the picture. The number of pixels that
can be displayed determines the resolution (quality) of the video signal. The
video signal breaks down the television picture into three parts: the picture
brightness (luminance), the color (chrominance), and the audio.
There are three primary systems used for analog television broadcasting: NTSC,
PAL, and SECAM. The National Television System Committee (NTSC) is used for the
Americas, while PAL and SECAM are primarily used in the UK and other countries. The
major difference between the analog television systems is the number of lines
of resolution and the methods used for color transmission.
There have been enhancements made to analog video systems over the past 50
years. These include color video, stereo audio, separate audio programming
channels, slow data rate digital transfer (for closed captioning), and ghost
canceling. The next major change to television technology will be its
conversion to HDTV.
Figure 1 demonstrates the operation of the basic NTSC analog television system.
The video source is broken into 30 frames per second and converted into
multiple lines per frame. Each video line transmission begins with a burst
pulse (called a sync pulse) that is followed by a signal that represents color
and intensity. The time relative to the starting sync is the position on the
line from left to right. Each line is sent until a frame is complete and the
next frame can begin. The television receiver decodes the video signal to
position and control the intensity of an electronic beam that scans the
phosphorus tube (“picture tube”) to recreate the display.
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