HDTV
Glossary of Terms
A/D
Analog
to digital conversion. Used at transmission end of
broadcast.
Addressable
Resolution
The
highest resolution signal that a TV or monitor can accept. It is
important to note that while a particular device (Digital-HDTV) is
able to receive the resolution, it may not be capable of displaying
it.
Analog
TV
Analog
technology has been in use for the past 50 years to transmit
conventional TV signals to consumers. "Standard" television
broadcasts in analog TV. Analog signals vary continuously, creating
fluctuations in color and brightness.
Artifacts
Unwanted
visible effects in the picture created by disturbances in the
transmission or image processing, such as 'edge crawl' or 'hanging
dots' in analog pictures, or 'pixelation' in digital
pictures.
Aspect
Ratio
A
numerical expression of the relationship of width to height of a TV
screen. 4:3: This numerical sequence refers to the aspect ratio of
the National Television Systems Committee (NTSC) TV screen, with
"4" unit width corresponding to "3" unit height, proportionally,
regardless of the actual size of the screen. 16:9: This numerical
sequence refers to the aspect ratio of wide screen DTV formats for
all HDTV and some SDTV (Standard Definition) video. A "16" unit
width corresponds to "9" unit height proportionally, regardless of
the actual size of the screen. The widescreen 16:9 numerical
sequence provides a viewing experience very similar to that of 35
mm movies.
ATSC
An
acronym for Advanced Television Systems Committee, which is
responsible for developing and establishing Digital-HDTV Standards;
and the name of the DTV system used by broadcasters in the
U.S.
- B -
Bandwidth
A
range of frequencies used to transmit such information as picture
and sound. For TV broadcasters, the FCC has allocated 6Mhz for each
channel. For DTV, the maximum bit rate possible within the
bandwidth is 19.4 Mbps, which is one HDTV channel. SDTV has a lower
bit rate, therefore the bandwidth can accommodate more than one
channel.
Barn
Doors
A term
used in television production to describe the effect that occurs
when a 4:3 image is viewed on a 16:9 screen. When this happens,
viewers see black bars on the sides of the screen or "barn
doors."
Bit
Rate
Measured
as "bits per second," and used to express the rate at which data is
transmitted or processed. The higher the bit rate, the more data
that is processed and, typically, the higher the picture
resolution.
- C -
Codec
This
term is short for "Coder-decoder." A codec is a device that
converts analog video and audio signals into a digital format for
transmission. It also converts received digital signals back into
an analog format.
Component
Video Connection
The output
of a video device (such as a DTV set-top box), or the input of a
DTV receiver or monitor consisting of three primary color signals:
red, green, and blue that together convey all necessary picture
information. With current consumer video products, the three
component signals have been translated into luminance (Y) and two
color difference signals (PP, PR), each on a separate
wire.
Composite
Video
An analog,
encoded video signal that includes vertical and horizontal
synchronizing information. Since both luminance (brightness) and
chrominance (color) signals are encoded together, only a single
connection wire is needed.
Compression
Compression
refers to the reduction of the size of digital data files by
removing redundant and/or non-critical information ("data" being
the elements of video, audio and other "information"). Digital TV
in the U.S. would not be possible without
compression.
Computer
Input
Some HDTV
sets have an input like SVGA or VGA that allows the TV sets to be
connected to computers.
- D -
D/A
Conversion
of digital to analog signals. The device is also referred to as DAC
(D/A converter). In order for conventional television technology to
display digitally transmitted TV data, the data must be decoded
first and then converted back to an analog
signal.
Datacasting
Also
known as "enhanced TV." Datacasting is the act of providing
enhanced options offered with some digital programming to provide
additional program material or non-program related resources. This
allows viewers the ability to download data (video, audio, text,
graphics, maps, services, etc.) to specially equipped computers,
cache boxes, set-top boxes, or DTV
receivers.
Decoder
See
"codec." A device or program that translates encoded data into its
original format (i.e., it decodes the
data.)
Digital
Digital
refers to the circuitry in which data-carrying signals are
restricted to one of two voltage levels, corresponding to logic 1
or 0.
Digital
Cable
A service
provided by many cable providers, digital cable offers viewers more
channels. Contrary to many consumers' beliefs, digital cable is not
the same as High-Definition Television or digital television;
rather digital cable simply offers cable subscribers the options of
paying for more services. Digital Monitor
DTV monitors are
televisions that can display a digital signal but lack an
integrated tuner (unlike an integrated digital set), and thus
cannot receive a digital broadcast signal without an additional
set-top box.
Digital
Television (DTV)
Digital TV
is the umbrella term encompassing High-definition Television and
several other applications, including Standard Definition
Television, datacasting, multicasting and
interactivity.
Digital
Tuner
A digital
tuner serves as the decoder required to receive and display digital
broadcasts. It can be included inside TV sets or via a set-top
box.
Dolby
Digital
This is a
digital surround sound technology used in movie theaters and
upscale home theater systems that enhances audio. Home theater
components with this technology work in conjunction with a
"5.1-speaker" system (five speakers plus a low-frequency subwoofer)
to produce true-to-life audio that draws the listener into the
onscreen action.
DTS
Digital
Theater Systems sound. Discrete 5.1 channel surround system similar
but not the same as Dolby Digital. Dolby Digital is the DTV
standard, but DTS competes with it on DVD and in the movie
theaters.
Down
Converting
Process by
which a high-definition signal is converted to a standard
definition picture.
- E -
Enhanced
TV
Also known
as "datacasting." This term is used for certain digital on-air
programming that includes additional resources downloaded to
viewers. Some forms of enhanced TV allow live interaction; other
forms are not visible on-screen until later recalled by viewers.
Producers add these options to some digital programming to enhance
program material -- allowing viewers the ability to download
related program resources to specially equipped computers, cache
boxes, set-top boxes, or DTV receivers.
EDTV
This
acronym stands for "Enhanced Definition Television." It refers to a
complete products/system with at least a digital receiver display
scanning format, and Dolby Surround Sound audio output
capabilities.
EPG
Electronic
program guide. An on-screen display of channels and program
data.
- F -
Frequency
The
number of times per second that a signal fluctuates. The
international unit for frequency is the hertz (Hz). One thousand
hertz equals 1 KHz (kilohertz). One million hertz equals 1 MHz
(megahertz). One billion hertz equals 1 GHz (gigahertz). Television
is broadcast in frequencies ranging from 54 MHz to 216 MHz (VHF)
and 470 MHz to 806 MHz (UHF).
- G -
Generation
Loss
This
refers to video degradation caused by successive recordings (dubs
of other dubs) from the master source. This is overcome by digital
recording.
- H -
HDTV
"High-definition
Television." This is the most superior video picture available in
Digital TV. In the U.S., the 1080i and 720p formats in a 16:9
aspect ratio are the two acceptable HDTV formats. HDTV is a
component of DTV.
HDV
"High
Definition
Video" The
high-definition, wide screen version of the DV magnetic tape
format. Like DV, HDV recording moves at a constant data rate and
stores data on the same DV and MiniDV tapes as SD camcorders.
Introduced in 2003, HDV uses 4:2:0 color sampling, MPEG-2 video
compression and MPEG-1 audio compression (16-bit stereo). HDV
machines record YCbCr frames in 1280x720p, 1980x1080i or 1980x1080p
resolutions.
- I -
Interactive
Television
This is
when TV programming features interactive content and enhancements,
blending traditional TV viewing with the interactivity of a
personal computer.
Interoperability
This
refers to the ability of a system or a product to work with other
systems or products without special effort on the part of the
customer. For example, interoperability would be required for a
digital television set to be plugged into a VCR that is plugged
into cable with all the components working
together.
Interlaced
Scanning
This
process divides and presents each video frame as two fields.
Imagine a video frame being divided by the odd and even horizontal
lines that make up the picture. The first field presents the odd
lines; the second field represents the even lines. The fields are
aligned and timed so that, with a still image, the human eye blends
the two fields together and sees them as one. Motion in the image
makes the fields noticeable. Interlace scanning allows only half
the lines to be transmitted and presented at any given
moment.
- L -
Letterbox
Letterbox
refers to the image of a wide-screen picture on a standard 4:3
aspect ratio television screen, typically with black bars above and
below. It is used to maintain the original aspect ratio of the
original source (usually a theatrical motion picture of 16:9 aspect
ratio or wider).
- M -
Multicasting
The
option to multicast was made possible by digital technology to
allow each digital broadcast station to split its bit stream into
2, 3, 4 or more individual channels of programming and/or data
services. (For example, on channel 7, you could watch 7-1, 7-2, 7-3
or 7-4.)
Must-carry
This
refers to the legal obligation of cable companies to carry analog
or digital signals of over-the-air local broadcasters.
- N -
NTSC
NTSC
is the acronym that stands for National Television Systems
Committee and the name of the current analog transmission standard
used in the U.S., which the committee created in 1953.
- P -
Pixel
Pixel
is actually two words jammed together ¾ picture and element. A
pixel is a tiny sample of video information, the "little squares"
that make up an overall picture.
Pixels
Per Inch
Pixels per
inch (PPI) is a measure of the sharpness (that is, the density of
illuminated points) on a television display
screen.
Progressive
Scanning
A system
of video scanning where lines of a picture are displayed
consecutively (unlike interlaced).
- R -
Resolution
The
level of resolution directly affects picture quality. The higher
the resolution, the more picture detail there is. Many things
affect picture quality, including number of bits, pixel count,
format, receiver quality, cameras, lenses and lighting used for
live or taped programming. Resolution is measured by the number of
pixels displayed. One of the high-definition picture formats is
composed of 1080 active lines, and each line is composed of 1920
active pixels. Therefore, each frame has over 2 million
(1080x1920=2,073,600) color pixels creating the image. By way of
contrast, today's typical analog television is roughly equivalent
to 480 active lines, with each line holding about 440 pixels. So,
each frame has a little over 200,000 color pixels in use creating
the image.
- S -
Sampling
This
is the digital process by which analog information is measured,
often millions of times per second, in order to convert analog to
digital.
Standard
Definition TV Format (SDTV)
There are
two main digital formats - HDTV and SDTV. SDTV typically does
produce better quality images than that of traditional analog TV
and pictures somewhat akin to digital cable. However, its images
are not nearly as sharp as the images from the ultimate form of
digital television ¾ High-definition TV
(HDTV).
Set-top
Converter Box
This unit
sits on top of the viewer's analog TV, receives the Digital TV
signal, converts it to an analog signal, and then sends that signal
on to the analog TV.
SVGA
This
acronym is short for the "Super Video Graphics Array" display mode.
SVGA resolution is 800 x 600 pixels.
S-Video
Separated
video. An encoded video signal which separates the brightness from
color data. S-video can greatly improve the picture when connecting
TVs to any high quality video source such as digital broadcast
satellite (DBS) and DVDs.
- T -
Terrestrial
Broadcasting
This is a
broadcast signal transmitted "over-the-air" to an antenna.
- U -
UHF
Ultra
high frequency, the range used by TV channels 14 through
69.
Upconverting
Process
by which a standard definition picture is changed to a simulated
high-definition picture.
- V -
VGA
This
acronym is short for the "Video Graphics Array" display mode. VGA
resolution is 640 x 480 pixels.
VHF
Very
high frequency, the range used by TV channels 2 through 13.
- W -
Wide
screen
A term
given to picture displays with a wider aspect ratio than PAL/NTSC
4:3. Digital HDTV or SDTV is referred to as "16:9 wide screen."
Most motion pictures also have a 16:9 wide screen aspect ratio.
Most Digital TVs have a screen that is wider than it is tall (if a
Digital TV screen is nine inches high, it's 16 inches wide.) When
watching a show recorded in the wide screen format on a Digital TV,
viewers see more of the movie, while when viewing wide screen
format on an analog TV, cropped edges are evident.




