written 7.7 years ago by | • modified 2.8 years ago |
Mumbai university > Electronics and telecommunication Engineering > Sem 6 > Television Engineering
Marks: 05
Years: May 2016
written 7.7 years ago by | • modified 2.8 years ago |
Mumbai university > Electronics and telecommunication Engineering > Sem 6 > Television Engineering
Marks: 05
Years: May 2016
written 7.7 years ago by |
• Japan had been the pioneer in developing HDTV systems. They first developed Hi-Vision (an acronym of HIgh definition teleVISION) in 1979.
• The system used 1125 lines (1035 active lines), 5:3 aspect ratio, a bandwidth of 20MHz for luminance signal and 7MHz for chrominance signal (about 4 times the bandwidth used by the traditional SDTV) and dot interleaving in addition to line interleaving.
• It was based on division of a carrier frequency into multiple frequencies and then modulating each frequency using frequency modulation and transmitting them using time division multiplexing.
• This Hi-Vision system also came to be known as MUSE (an acronym of MUltiple Sub-Nyquist Encoding).
• Most of the video signal was contained in low frequencies and so it was not necessary to use the Nyquist sampling rate for the highest video frequency of 5MHz.
• Lower frequency content could be easily recovered by using low sampling rate called sub-Nyquist rate.
• Despite this innovation, transmission bandwidth was quite high as analog frequency modulation was used.
• At that time, digital modulation for video signals was not available.
• So the video signal was digitized for multiplexing and recording purpose but for transmission it had to be converted back to analog signal for modulating radio frequency carriers using frequency modulation.
• Hence it was not suitable for terrestrial broadcast but was alright at that time for satellite relay systems which were capable of accommodating quite high bandwidths.
• Satellite broadcast suited Japan very well as the whole island could be covered by a single satellite.
• Japan started broadcasting Hi-Vision TV to its subscribers in 1995.
• With the growing popularity of HDTV broadcasts, demand for channels increased and the broadcast satellite system could not cope up; so Japan discontinued satellite broadcast of Hi-Vision from October 1, 2007.
• Despite the deficiency of high bandwidth, it is latently true that without the pioneering Hi-Vision, modern high definition digital TV broadcast would not have been in use so soon.