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DVB-T (Digital Video Broadcasting Terrestrial)

List of digital video broadcast standards


DVB family (Europe)

DVB-S (satellite) DVB-S2

DVB-T (terrestrial) DVB-T2

DVB-C (cable) DVB-C2

DVB-H (handheld) DVB-SH (satellite)

ATSC family (North America) ATSC (terrestrial/cable) ATSC-M/H (mobile/handheld) ISDB family (Japan/Brazil) ISDB-S (satellite) ISDB-T (terrestrial) 1seg (handheld)

ISDB-C (cable) SBTVD (Brazil) Chinese Digital Video Broadcasting standard DMB-T/H (Terrestrial/Handheld)

ADTB-T (Terrestrial) CMMB (Handheld) ABS-S (satellite) DMB Family (Korean) T-DMB (terrestrial) S-DMB (satellite) Codecs Video Audio MP3 AC-3 AAC HE-AAC MPEG-2 MPEG-4 AVC

Frequency bands VHF UHF SHF

DVB-T is an abbreviation for Digital Video Broadcasting Terrestrial; it is the DVB European-based consortium standard for the broadcast transmission of digital terrestrial television. This system transmits compressed digital audio, video and other data in an MPEG transport stream, using COFDM modulation.

Contents

1 Basics of DVB-T 2 Technical description of a DVB-T transmitter 3 Technical description of the receiver 4 Countries and territories using DVB-T[2] o 4.1 Americas o 4.2 Europe o 4.3 Asia/Australasia o 4.4 Africa 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References

8 External links

Basics of DVB-T
Rather than carrying the data on a single radio frequency carrier, OFDM works by splitting the digital data stream into a large number of slower digital streams, each of which digitally modulate a set of closely spaced adjacent carrier frequencies. In the case of DVB-T, there are two choices for the number of carriers known as 2K-mode or 8K-mode. These are actually 1705 or 6817 carriers that are approximately 4 kHz or 1 kHz apart. DVB-T offers three different modulation schemes (QPSK, 16QAM, 64QAM). DVB-T has been adopted or proposed for digital television broadcasting by many countries (see map), using mainly VHF 7 MHz and UHF 8 MHz channels whereas Taiwan uses 6 MHz channels. Examples include the UK's Freeview. The DVB-T Standard is published as EN 300 744, Framing structure, channel coding and modulation for digital terrestrial television. This is available from the ETSI website, as is ETSI TS 101 154, Specification for the use of Video and Audio Coding in Broadcasting Applications based on the MPEG-2 Transport Stream, which gives details of the DVB use of source coding methods for MPEG-2 and, more recently, H.264/MPEG-4 AVC as well as audio encoding systems. Many countries that have adopted DVB-T have published standards for their implementation. These include the D-Book in the UK, the Italian DGTVi [1], the ETSI E-Book and Scandivia NorDig. DVB-T has been further developed into newer standards such as DVB-H (Handheld), now in operation, and DVB-T2, which was recently finalised. DVB-T as a digital transmission delivers data in a series of discrete blocks at the symbol rate. DVB-T is a COFDM transmission technique which includes the use of a Guard Interval. It allows the receiver to cope with strong multipath situations. Within a geographical area, DVB-T also allows single-frequency network (SFN) operation, where two or more transmitters carrying the same data operating on the same frequency. In such cases the signals from each transmitter in the SFN needs to be accurately time-aligned, which is done by a sync information in the stream and timing at each transmitter referenced to GPS. The length of the Guard Interval can be chosen. It is a tradeoff between datarate and SFN capability. The longer the guard intervall the larger is the potential SFN area without creating Inter Symbol Interference (ISI). It can be possible to operate SFNs which do not fulfill the guard interval condition if the self interference is properly planned and monitored.

Technical description of a DVB-T transmitter

Scheme of a DVB-T transmission system With reference to the figure, a short description of the signal processing blocks follows.

Source coding and MPEG-2 multiplexing (MUX): compressed video, compressed audio, and data streams are multiplexed into PSs (Programme Streams). One or more PSs are joined together into an MPEG-2 TS (MPEG-2 Transport Stream); this is the basic digital stream which is being transmitted and received by home Set Top Boxes (STB). Allowed bitrates for the transported data depend on a number of coding and modulation parameters: it can range from about 5 to about 32 Mbit/s (see the bottom figure for a complete listing). Splitter: two different TSs can be transmitted at the same time, using a technique called Hierarchical Transmission. It may be used to transmit, for example, a standard definition SDTV signal and a high definition HDTV signal on the same carrier. Generally, the SDTV signal is more robust than the HDTV one. At the receiver, depending on the quality of the received signal, the STB may be able to decode the HDTV stream or, if signal strength lacks, it can switch to the SDTV one (in this way, all receivers that are in proximity of the transmission site can lock the HDTV signal, whereas all the other ones, even the farthest, may still be able to receive and decode an SDTV signal). MUX adaptation and energy dispersal: the MPEG-2 TS is identified as a sequence of data packets, of fixed length (188 bytes). With a technique called energy dispersal, the byte sequence is decorrelated. External encoder: a first level of error correction is applied to the transmitted data, using a nonbinary block code, a Reed-Solomon RS (204, 188) code, allowing the correction of up to a maximum of 8 wrong bytes for each 188-byte packet. External interleaver: convolutional interleaving is used to rearrange the transmitted data sequence, in such a way that it becomes more rugged to long sequences of errors.

Internal encoder: a second level of error correction is given by a punctured convolutional code, which is often denoted in STBs menus as FEC (Forward error correction). There are five valid coding rates: 1/2, 2/3, 3/4, 5/6, and 7/8. Internal interleaver: data sequence is rearranged again, aiming to reduce the influence of burst errors. This time, a block interleaving technique is adopted, with a pseudo-random assignment scheme (this is really done by two separate interleaving processes, one operating on bits and another one operating on groups of bits). Mapper: the digital bit sequence is mapped into a base band modulated sequence of complex symbols. There are three valid modulation schemes: QPSK, 16-QAM, 64QAM. Frame adaptation: the complex symbols are grouped in blocks of constant length (1512, 3024, or 6048 symbols per block). A frame is generated, 68 blocks long, and a superframe is built by 4 frames. Pilot and TPS signals: in order to simplify the reception of the signal being transmitted on the terrestrial radio channel, additional signals are inserted in each block. Pilot signals are used during the synchronization and equalization phase, while TPS signals (Transmission Parameters Signalling) send the parameters of the transmitted signal and to unequivocally identify the transmission cell. The receiver must be able to synchronize, equalize, and decode the signal to gain access to the information held by the TPS pilots. Thus, the receiver must know this information beforehand, and the TPS data is only used in special cases, such as changes in the parameters, resynchronizations, etc.

Spectrum of a DVB-T signal in 8k mode (note the flat-top characteristics).

OFDM Modulation: the sequence of blocks is modulated according to the OFDM technique, using 2048, 4096, or 8192 carriers (2k, 4k, 8k mode, respectively). Increasing the number of carriers does not modify the payload bit rate, which remains constant. Guard interval insertion: to decrease receiver complexity, every OFDM block is extended, copying in front of it its own end (cyclic prefix). The width of such guard interval can be 1/32, 1/16, 1/8, or 1/4 that of the original block length. Cyclic prefix is required to operate single frequency networks, where there may exist an ineliminable

interference coming from several sites transmitting the same program on the same carrier frequency.

DAC and front-end: the digital signal is transformed into an analog signal, with a digital-to-analog converter (DAC), and then modulated to radio frequency (VHF, UHF) by the RF front-end. The occupied bandwidth is designed to accommodate each single DVB-T signal into 5, 6, 7, or 8 MHz wide channels. The base band sample rate provided at the DAC input depends on the channel bandwidth: it is samples/s, where B is the channel bandwidth expressed in Hz.

Available bitrates (Mbit/s) for a DVB-T system in 8 MHz channels

Guard interval Modulation Coding rate 1/4 1/8 1/16 1/32

1/2

4.976

5.529

5.855

6.032

2/3

6.635

7.373

7.806

8.043

QPSK

3/4

7.465

8.294

8.782

9.048

5/6

8.294

9.216

9.758

10.053

7/8

8.709

9.676

10.246

10.556

1/2

9.953

11.059

11.709

12.064

2/3 16-QAM 3/4

13.271

14.745

15.612

16.086

14.929

16.588

17.564

18.096

5/6

16.588

18.431

19.516

20.107

7/8

17.418

19.353

20.491

21.112

1/2

14.929

16.588

17.564

18.096

2/3

19.906

22.118

23.419

24.128

64-QAM

3/4

22.394

24.882

26.346

27.144

5/6

24.882

27.647

29.273

30.160

7/8

26.126

29.029

30.737

31.668

Technical description of the receiver


The receiving STB adopts techniques which are dual to those ones used in the transmission.

Front-end and ADC: the analog RF signal is converted to base-band and transformed into a digital signal, using an analog-to-digital converter (ADC). Time and frequency synchronization: the digital base band signal is searched to identify the beginning of frames and blocks. Any problems with the frequency of the components of the signal are corrected, too. The property that the guard interval at the end of the symbol is placed also at the beginning is exploited to find the beginning of a new OFDM symbol. On the other hand, continual pilots (whose value and position is determined in the standard and thus known by the receiver) determine the frequency offset suffered by the signal. This frequency offset might have been caused by Doppler effect, inaccuracies in either the transmitter or receiver clock, and so on. Guard interval disposal: the cyclic prefix is removed. OFDM demodulation Frequency equalization: the pilot signals equalize the received signal. Demapping Internal deinterleaving Internal decoding: uses the Viterbi algorithm. External deinterleaving External decoding MUX adaptation MPEG-2 demultiplexing and source decoding

Countries and territories using DVB-T

DTT broadcasting systems. Countries using DVB-T are shown in blue.


Americas

Argentina (experimental) Colombia (decided in August 28, 2008) [3] Uruguay (decided in September 2007, but not effective yet)

Europe

Albania Andorra Austria Belgium Bosnia and Herzegovina (Plan to switch by 2011[4]) Bulgaria (experimental) Belarus (experimental) Croatia See DVB-T in Croatia.) Czech Republic Cyprus Denmark (See DVB-T in Denmark.) o Faroe Islands

Iceland Asia/Australasia Ireland (Will use MPEG-4 video, see DVB-T Australia in Ireland.) India (Uses Italy MPEG-4 and Latvia (experimental) MPEG-2 Lithuania (uses Video) H.264/MPEG-4 AVC) Indonesia Luxembourg Iran (pilot Republic of Macedonia service) Malta Israel Montenegro Malaysia Netherlands (experimental) Norway (uses MPEG-4 Burma video) New Poland (experimental, Zealand (see uses MPEG-4 video) Freeview) Portugal (experimental, Philippines uses MPEG-4 video) (experimental) Romania Singapore Russia (experimental) Saudi Slovakia Arabia Serbia Sri Lanka Slovenia (Use MPEG(pilot service [5] 4 video fom 2007. See ) DVB-T in Slovenia) Taiwan Spain Thailand Sweden (Uses MPEG Vietnam 2 for SD and MPEG-4 for United

Greenland (Nuuk tv) Estonia (uses MPEG-4 video) Finland France (uses MPEG-2 for SD and MPEG-4 for HD transmissions.) Germany Greece Hungary (branded MinDigTV, uses MPEG-4 video exclusively.)

HD transmissions. See Arab Emirates DVB-T in Sweden.) Africa Switzerland Turkey (experimental) Cape United Kingdom (See Verde DVB-T in United Egypt Kingdom.) Kenya Ukraine (Uses MPEG Mauritius 2 - experimental, Kyiv Morocco only, 19 TV channels and 3 Namibia radio channels. Regular South broadcasts will use MPEGAfrica (Uses 4 exclusively Ukrainian MPEG-4) Digital TV Network Tunisia (Ukrainian)) (experimental)

See also

ATSC (Advanced Television Systems Committee, North American Standard) Digital audio broadcasting (low bitrate video suitable for moving receivers) DTV channel protection ratios DVB over IP Interactive television Digital terrestrial television DMB-T - Digital Multimedia Broadcast-Terrestrial ISDB - Integrated Services Digital Broadcasting OFDM system comparison table Spectral efficiency comparison table

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