Digital terrestrial television
Encyclopedia : D : DI : DIG : Digital terrestrial television
Digital Terrestrial Television (DTTV or DTT) is an implementation of digital technology to provide a greater number of channels (SDTV) and/or better quality of picture (EDTV, HDTV) and sound (AC3, Dolby Digital) through a conventional antenna (or aerial) instead of a satellite dish or cable connection. The technology used is ATSC in North America, ISDB-T in Japan, and DVB-T in Europe and Australia; the rest of the world remaining mostly undecided. ISDB-T is very similar to DVB-T and can share front-end receiver and demodulator components.
Transmission
DTTV is transmitted on radio frequencies that are similar to standard analog television, with the primary difference being the use of multiplex transmitters to allow reception of multiple channels on a single frequency range (such as a UHF or VHF channel).The amount of data that can be transmitted (and therefore the number of channels) is directly affected by the modulation method of the channel. The modulation method in DVB-T is COFDM with either 64 or 16 state Quadrature Amplitude Modulation (QAM). In general a 64QAM channel is capable of transmitting a greater bitrate, but is more susceptible to interference. 16 and 64QAM constellations can be combined in a single multiplex, providing a controllable degradation for more important programme streams. This is called hierarchical modulation.
The DVB-T standard is not used for terrestrial digital television in North America. Instead, the ATSC standard calls for 8VSB modulation, which has similar characteristics to the vestigial sideband modulation used for analogue television. This provides considerably less immunity to interference, and effectively does not provide for single-frequency network operation (which is in any case not relevant in the United States, where ATSC was invented).
Both systems use the MPEG-2 transport stream and video codec; they differ significantly in how related services (such as multichannel audio, captions, and program guides) are encoded.
Reception
DTTV is received via a set-top box, or integrated receiving device, that decodes the signal received via a standard aerial. However, due to frequency planning issues, an aerial with a different group (usually a wideband) may be required if the DTTV multiplexes lie outside the bandwidth of the originally installed aerial. This is quite common in the UK, see external links.DTT Around the world
Main article: List of digital television deployments by countryThe United Kingdom, Sweden and Spain were the first to launch DTT with platforms heavily reliant on pay television. All three pay platforms suffered from problems, and the British and Spanish pay television platforms failed financially. Since 2004, the Swedish pay platform, operated by Boxer, has proven to be very successful.
The UK DTT was relaunched as a free-to-air platform ("Freeview") in 2002 and the UK DTT currently leads the world in terms digital television penetration (along with Finland). A "lite" pay DTT service became available in the UK in 2004 with the Top Up TV offer.
In Spain, most muxes were closed after the failure of the pay DTT platform, Quiero TV. DTT was relaunched on 30 November 2005 with around 30 national and autonomous TV and radio channels broadcasting their DTTV signals free-to-air.
Germany launches a free-to-air platform region-by-region, starting in Berlin in November 2002. The analogue broadcasts ceases soon after the digital ones are started, and Berlin became completely digital on 4 August 2003. It is estimated that by the end of 2005, 59% of the population could access DTT services.
France's DTT platform, TNT (télévision numérique terrestre), offers 18 free channels and 11 pay channels. It is expected that by 2008 70% percent of the population will be able to receive TNT.
In Sweden, DTT was launched in 1999 operating solely with pay television. Pay television still dominates the platform with only the channels financed by the license fee and a few commercial channels broadcasting in the clear. Switch-off of the analogue signal started in 2005 and finishes in 2007. Finland launched DTT in 2001, and closes down all analogue signals in 2007. Most Finnish broadcasts are in the clear.
In December 2005 the EU recommended that its Member-States cease all analogue television transmissions by the year 2012. It also recommend that those members that have not yet launched DTT services should do so. Some EU member states have decided to complete this analogue switch-off as early as 2008 (e.g. Sweden). Two member states (not specified in the announcement) have expressed concerns that they might not be able to proceed to the switchover by 2012 due to technical limitations, the rest of the EU member states are expected to stop analogue television transmissions by 2012. Luxembourg was the one of the last member states to join DTT in April 2006. The national channels joined in June 2006. On September 1st 2006, Luxembourg will become the first completely digital country in Europe.
Table
The following table show launches of DTT and the closing down of analogue television in several countries:| Country | Official launch | Start of closedown | Closedown finished | System used |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| United Kingdom | 15 November 1998 | Planned 2008 | Planned 2012 | DVB-T |
| Sweden | April, 1999 | 19 September, 2005 | 21 November 2007 | DVB-T |
| Spain | May 2000 | 2008 (Local channels) | 3 April 2010 (Other channels; 2009 in Catalonia) | DVB-T |
| Finland | August 27, 2001 | 31 August 2007 | DVB-T | |
| Germany | November 2002 | August 2003 | Planned 2008 | DVB-T |
| Portugal | 2002/2003 | 2010 | DVB-T | |
| Faroe Islands | 2002/2003 | December 2002 | DVB-T | |
| Belgium | 2002/2003 | DVB-T | ||
| Netherlands | 2003 | 30 October 2006 | DVB-T | |
| Italy | 1 January 2004 | 31 December 2012 | DVB-T | |
| Switzerland | Began 2001 | DVB-T | ||
| France | 31 March 2005 | DVB-T | ||
| Greece | 16 January 2006 | DVB-T | ||
| Denmark | March 31, 2006 | November 1, 2009 | DVB-T | |
| Luxembourg | April 2006 | 1st September 2006 | 1st September 2006 | DVB-T |
| Turkey | February 2006 (trial services) | DVB-T | ||
| Albania | August 2005 | DVB-T | ||
| Australia | January 1, 2001 | Planned 2010 | DVB-T | |
| South Africa | March, 2006 | Planned 2009 | DVB-T | |
| Hong Kong | 2007 | 2012 | Testing with DVB-T | |
| Malaysia | September 2006 (trials) | 2015 | Testing with DVB-T | |
| New Zealand | 2007 | 2012 to 2016 | Testing with DVB-T | |
| Japan | December 1, 2003 | Planned 2011 | ISDB-T | |
| United States | February 17, 2009 | ATSC | ||
| Canada | ATSC | |||
| Mexico | ATSC | |||
| South Korea | 2001 | Planned 2010 | ATSC | |
See also
- DVB-T (Digital Video Broadcasting - Terrestrial)
- DVB (Digital Video Broadcasting)
- Digital television (DTV)
- List of digital television deployments by country
- 1seg
External links
- [Complete list of UK DTT transmitters and any change of group (see Reception section of this page)]
- [DigiTAG]
- [The DVB Project]
- [Official DVB-H Information]
- [Open DVB-T Implementation] (BSD license) with source code for Matlab and GNU Octave
- [TDT Spanish faq]
- [Official TNT site]
- [Digital terrestrial television in Spain]
- [Digital Broadcasting Device Manager]
- [Worldwide overview of the digital terrestrial systems ATSC, DVB-T and ISDB-T]
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