Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

82
Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620

Transcript of Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Page 1: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Broadcast Basics

Week 13

ICS 620

Page 2: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

BROADCAST BASICS

ICS 620

Week 13

Page 3: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Introduction

Video Basics (Analog Systems)

Transmission Systems

• Wireless (terrestrial)

• Wired (cable television)

Digital Video (Two Weeks)

Page 4: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Video Standards

• Standards and Principals

– Persistence of Vision

The rapid presentation of frames of video information to give you the illusion of smooth motion.

Page 5: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Frequency Standards

Frame Frequency• 16 Frames per Second (fps) Black and

White

• 24 fps SOF

• Continuity of Action

• Problem of Flicker– The gross alteration of light and dark

Page 6: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Frequency Standards

Field Frequency

• Frame Frequency x 2

• Continuity of Illumination

Page 7: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Film Vs. Video

• Film - Project a complete picture

• Video - Scan, line by line, at a high rate of speed - 6 million bits per second

Page 8: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

How do we describe a picture?

• A picture element (“pel” or “pixel”) one at a time

• For each pel we need to somehow describe:– Brightness (luminance)– Hue (phase, “tint”)– Saturation (color intensity, “chroma”)

Page 9: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Vertical Resolution

• The picture quality associated with the number of dots (pixels) used to construct the picture.

– 367,000 dots

– on 525 rows (vertical)

Page 10: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Film vs. NTSC Specs

Aspect Ratio

Page 11: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Camera TubesCamera Tubes

Page 12: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Early Camera Tubes

Page 13: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Image Orthicon

Page 14: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Electronic Scan(Camera Pickup Tube)

Video Signal

Electron Beam

TargetLensObject

Page 15: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Scanning

• Progressive

• Interlace/Offset

Interlace Example

NTSC: 525 lines, 30 frames/sec,

60 fields/sec

Page 16: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Picture TubePicture Tube

Page 17: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Picture Tube

Page 18: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Picture Tube

Page 19: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Scanning a Focused Image

Page 20: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Progressive Scanning

Page 21: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Interlace Scanning

Page 22: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Sync Pulses

Page 23: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Differences Between Horizontal and Vertical Synch Pulses

Rate Duration

Vertical 59.94/sec 1:3

Horizontal 15,734.264/sec 3:1

Page 24: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Waveform Sketch of a Video Signal

Page 25: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

A simple videoA simple video waveformwaveform

One Line

Page 26: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Waveform of Sync Pulses

Page 27: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

IRE Measurement Scale

Page 28: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Vertical Blanking Interval (VBI)

• Lines 1-21 of each field

Vertical Interval Test Signal (VITS)

Vertical Interval Reference Signal (VIRS)

Lines 1-9 V-sync and Equalizing Pulses

Lines 12-14 SMPTE Time Code

Lines 17-19 VITS and VIRS

Line 20 Network Source Code (field 1)

Line 21 Closed captioning (field 1)

Page 29: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Kell Factor

The Ratio of effective resolution to the theoretical resolution is known as the Kell Factor.

Page 30: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Vertical Resolution Summary

• Max Lines/Frame = 525

• Lost for Vertical Blanking = 42 (21 lines per field)

• Visible = 525-42 = 483

• Kell Factor = 72.5%

• Effective Resolution = 350 lines

Page 31: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Horizontal Resolution Summary

(4.2 MHz Video Bandwidth)

= 4.2 cycles per microsecond

x 52 microseconds (active scan)

x 2 pixels per cycle

= 436 pixels per line

Page 32: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Television Transmission

• Picture Information

• Blanking pulses

• Sync pulses

• Audio information

Page 33: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

What about Color?

Page 34: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Component Nature of ColorComponent Nature of Color

R

G B

Page 35: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Video Color Palette

Page 36: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Color Television

R = Red

G = Green

B = Blue

B + G = Cyan

G + R = Yellow

B + R = Magenta

Page 37: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

NTSC Color BarsNTSC Color Bars

Page 38: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Block Diagram of Color Camera

Page 39: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Gamma

A measurement of contrast, gamma

correction is required because the

brightness output of a camera does

not correspond to the brightness

recognition of the human eye.

Page 40: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Composite Color

• Y = Luminance SignalY =30% red + 59% green + 11% blue

• C = Chrominance SignalC = I Q Matrix

Page 41: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Color Matrix

• Saturation = Amplitude of the I and Q signals

• Hue = Phase developed by the difference in amplitude between the I and Q signals

Page 42: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Transmitter TubeTransmitter Tube

Page 43: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Color TV Transmitter

Page 44: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

TV Frequency Allocations

2 - 4 VHF-Lo 54 MHz - 72 MHz

5 - 6 VHF-Lo 76 MHz - 88 MHz

7 – 13 VHF-Hi 174 MHz – 216 MHz

14 – 59 UHF 470 MHz – 746 MHz

NOTE: Natural breaks occur between channels 4 and 5; channels 6 and 7; and channels 13 and 14. Each channel is 6 MHz wide.

Page 45: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

NTSC Bandpass Characteristics (Black and White)

Page 46: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Color TV Signal

Page 47: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

NTSC Bandpass Characteristics (Color)

Page 48: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Color TV Signal

Page 49: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Worldwide Standards

• National Television System Committee - NTSC (1953)

• Phase Alternation Line -PAL (1967)

• Sequentiel Couleur Avec Memoire - SECAM (1967)

Page 50: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

World TV Standards

Page 51: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

World TV Standards

Page 52: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Principal TV Systems

Page 53: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

FM Stereo Transmitter

Transmitter Output

• Main Channel (L + R)

• Stereo Channel (L - R)

• 19 kHz Pilot Sub-carrier

Page 54: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Stereo Multiplexing

• L+R Signal (Main Channel)

• L-R Signal (Stereo Channel)• 19 kHz Pilot Subcarrier (FM)

The Math

(L + R) + (L - R) = 2 L

(L + R) + (- L + R) = 2 R

Page 55: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

FM Stereo Receiver

Page 56: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Television Stereo

• Multi-channel Television Sound (MTS)

• Used to provide Stereo on conventional NTSC TV broadcast (TV has been FM mono for most of it’s history)

Page 57: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Television Transmission Systems

Over-the AirOver-the Air

Terrestrial BroadcastingTerrestrial Broadcasting

Page 58: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Antenna Systems

• Radio Energy in Space

–300 million meters per second

• E = MC2

• Speed of Light

Page 59: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Spectrum

Page 60: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Wavelength

• Lambda (meters)

• Velocity (300,000,000 meters/sec.)

• Frequency (Hz)

= v/f

Page 61: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

TV Station

WTHR-TV

WTHR-TV

Ch.13 (210-216 MHz)

WAVELENGTH IN:

A. Meters

B. Miles

C. Feet

Page 62: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

WTHR Television - Channel 13Indianapolis, Indiana

• Channel 13 (210-216 MHz)

• 316 kw visual

• 63.2 kw aural

• 980t/1,039gTelevision Factbook

47 CFR 73.603

Page 63: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Wavelength ExampleWTHR Television

Meters: Lambda = 300/211.25 = 1.46 meters

Miles: Lambda = .186/211.25 = .00088 miles

Feet: 1 meter = 3.28 feet

Lambda = 1.46 meters x 3.28 = 4.79 feet

Page 64: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

AM Station

• What is the height of this AM station antenna tower operating at 540 kHz, in meters and feet?

Page 65: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Propagation

• Radiation Patterns (Contours)

• AM - Tower as the Antenna

• FM/TV - Antenna on Tower

Page 66: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

TV Propagation

Page 67: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

TV Propagation Map

Page 68: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

FM Propagation Map

KFMD-FM Denver

Page 69: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

AM Tower

Side view Top view

Page 70: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

AM Directional Towers

Page 71: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

AM Directional Propagation

Page 72: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Irregular Geographical Patterns

• Refraction

• Reflection

• Absorption

• Interference

Page 73: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Why Directional Arrays?

• Co-Channel

• Adjacent Channel

• Other

Page 74: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Types of Waves

• Direct Waves (FM/TV)

• Ground Waves (AM)– Radials

• Swampy Soil vs. Sandy Terrain

• Sky Waves (AM at night)

Page 75: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Types of Waves

Page 76: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Direct Waves

The primary path of the direct wave is from the

transmitting antenna to the receiving antenna. So, the

receiving antenna must be located within the radio

horizon of the transmitting antenna. Because direct

waves are refracted slightly, even when propagated

through the troposphere, the radio horizon is actually

about one-third farther than the line-of-sight or natural

horizon.

Page 77: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Direct Waves

Page 78: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Ground Waves

The Earth has one refractive index and the

atmosphere has another, thus constituting

an interface that supports surface wave

transmission. These refractive indices are

subject to spatial and temporal changes.

Page 79: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Ground Waves

Page 80: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Sky Waves

Sky waves, often called ionospheric

waves, are radiated in an upward direction

and returned to Earth at some distant

location because of refraction.

Page 81: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Sky Waves

Page 82: Broadcast Basics Week 13 ICS 620. BROADCAST BASICS ICS 620 Week 13.

Questions

and

Answers