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Fundamentals of Analogue and Digital Broadcasting BSc. Media Technology BSc. Media Technology May 2007 May 2007

TVU Tech Episode 1 extra information

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this is A slide show that helps Illustrate the fundamentals of digital and analog broadcasting

Citation preview

Page 1: TVU Tech Episode 1 extra information

Fundamentals of Analogue and Digital

Broadcasting

Fundamentals of Analogue and Digital

Broadcasting

BSc. Media TechnologyBSc. Media TechnologyMay 2007May 2007

BSc. Media TechnologyBSc. Media TechnologyMay 2007May 2007

Page 2: TVU Tech Episode 1 extra information

Q. Is it inevitable that all broadcasting will go digital?

• The radio spectrum is a finite resource• Society today wants more choice, more

TV channels, more phones, etc.• Digital broadcasting makes more efficient

use of the available radio frequency bandwidth

Page 3: TVU Tech Episode 1 extra information

Q. Is it inevitable that all broadcasting will go digital?

• Analogue TV switch off planned to start in 2007 - 2012

• Digital distribution over the Internet is breaking down all the old models of broadcasting and traditional retail

Page 4: TVU Tech Episode 1 extra information

Common Terms

Analogue

Digital

Bandwidth

Compression

Page 5: TVU Tech Episode 1 extra information

Define the term Analogue:

• A continuous analogy of a sound or light wave transmitted as an electrical signal, which is an alternating voltage (A/C)

• Any audio or video equipment that has analogue signals going through it

• Old equipment!

Page 6: TVU Tech Episode 1 extra information

A/C signalVolts

+

- Time

Page 7: TVU Tech Episode 1 extra information

Waveforms:

Sine waves Complex waves

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Analogue:

• Audio signals

• Video signals

• Problems: Distortion, not robust, large bandwidth signals

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1011001101001001110010010101101110100100100010010010

10010DigitalDigital

Page 10: TVU Tech Episode 1 extra information

Define the term Digital:

• Represent all signals or data with binary numbers, 0 or 1

• Turns audio and video signals into discrete values, e.g. snapshot measurements of the a/c voltage waveform at regular points in time

• Is this a new technology?

Page 11: TVU Tech Episode 1 extra information

PCM - Pulse Code Modulation

Voltage

Time

5 4 3 2 1 0 1 2345

+

- + 2 = (10010011), + 4 = (10010100), - 1 = (01101100)

Page 12: TVU Tech Episode 1 extra information

PCM - Pulse Code Modulation

Volume

Time

Page 13: TVU Tech Episode 1 extra information

Advantages:

• Robust• Can be copied and cloned • No distortion

• Can take up less bandwidth than analogue when compressed

Page 14: TVU Tech Episode 1 extra information

BandwidthBandwidth

Page 15: TVU Tech Episode 1 extra information

Bandwidth

• This defines the maximum amount of information we can transmit through a given channel or connection

• Could be described as how much water you can get through a pipe

Page 16: TVU Tech Episode 1 extra information

Bandwidth• In analogue broadcasting this is how

much of the radio spectrum is used by the TV channel or radio station

• In digital broadcasting: How many ‘bits per second’

Page 17: TVU Tech Episode 1 extra information

Electro-magnetic Radio Spectrum

Page 18: TVU Tech Episode 1 extra information

30 GHzEHF

3 GHzSHF

300MHzUHF

30MHzVHF

3 MHz300 KHz30 KHz

Radio Spectrum

150 -300 KHzLong Wave

AM

500 -1600 KHzMedium Wave

AM

6 -18MHzShort Wave

AM

88 -108 MHzFM

10.7 -12.7 GHz Satellite TV

217 -230 MHzDAB radio

470 -840 MHzTerrestrial TV

1800 MHzPCN

Mobile phones

900 MHzGSM

Mobile phones

2320 - 2345S Band

Digital Radio

1470 - 1490 MHzL Band

Digital Radio

Other used frequencies:Police, emergency services, military, navigation, CB radio, toys, microphones,WiFi, Bluetooth, etc.

Page 19: TVU Tech Episode 1 extra information

Bandwidth Examplesshowing bits per second

Bandwidth Examplesshowing bits per second

Modem56 kbit

ADSL4 MbitCD audio

1.4 Mbit

DVD9.6 Mbit

HDTV &DV video25 Mbit

BluRay disc54 Mbit/sec

Page 20: TVU Tech Episode 1 extra information

CompressionCompression

Page 21: TVU Tech Episode 1 extra information

Compression

• Digital broadcasting would not be possible without data compression

• Compression also achieves the goal of efficient use of the airwaves

• We can now fit 6 - 8 digital TV channels into the same RF bandwidth as one old analogue TV channel

Page 22: TVU Tech Episode 1 extra information

Codecs

• Short for code - decode• A mathematical algorithm describing how

to reduce the size of the data• Can be a Lossless or Lossy process• Can be built into a hardware device or

software running on a computer

Page 23: TVU Tech Episode 1 extra information

Codec examples:

• Video: MPEG 1, MPEG 2, DivX, Windows Media video, MPEG 4 - H.264

• Audio: MP3, ATRAC, AAC, Windows Media audio, DTS, Dolby Digital AC3, Real Audio, Ogg Vorbis, MLP lossless

• Image: JPEG, JPEG2000, PNG, Gif, • Data: Zip, Stuffit

Page 24: TVU Tech Episode 1 extra information

Compression Examplesstereo audio files

Compression Examplesstereo audio files

AAC-HE48 kbit/sec

Uncompressed CD audio1.4 Mbit/sec

MiniDisc282 Kbit/sec

MP3128 Kbit/sec

Page 25: TVU Tech Episode 1 extra information

Summary:

• The global society is entering the digital information age

• All media production is becoming completely digital from start to finish

• For efficiency all broadcasting is going digital