[rec.video] HDTV--The Current State of High Definition Television

poynton@vector.Sun.COM (Charles Poynton) (03/11/89)

HDTV--The Current State of High Definition Television (TN21)

Charles A. Poynton <poynton@sun.COM>
Sun Microsystems, Inc.
89/03/09 11:33

SCOPE

Equipment for High Definition television (HDTV) is now commercially 
available, and HDTV is expected to be of great importance in industrial, 
scientific, and medical applications as well as in entertainment.  

This document outlines the background of HDTV, describes the basic 
parameters of the 1125-line system and their derivations, lists available 
commercial equipment, outlines potential application areas, reviews the 
standardization of HDTV to this point, and briefly describes standardization 
issues currently under discussion.  

INTRODUCTION

Nomenclature

A video system is usually denoted by its total line count and its frame rate 
(in hertz) separated by a solidus.  For example, 525/59.94 represents the 
scanning parameters of the U.S. broadcast television system, and 625/50 
scanning is used in Europe.  

Television system nomenclature refers to the total number of lines in a 
raster.  Computer graphics nomenclature is generally concerned with the 
number of picture lines (lines per picture height, L/PH), which is about 8% 
less than the total lines in the raster in order to accommodate vertical 
blanking interval overhead.  For example, a 1280 by 1024 system may have 
1066 total lines.  

HDTV is defined as having approximately double the number of lines of 
current broadcast television at approximately the same frame rate.  Hence 
the line rate is approximately doubled (from about 15 kHz to about 34 kHz).  
Luminance bandwidth is increased such that horizontal resolution is also 
approximately doubled.  

Resolution

HDTV has about double the (linear) resolution of 525-line television, or 
about 5.5 times its luminance spatial resolution.  

Computer graphics is not generally concerned with the resolution of the 
picture on the display screen, but refers to "resolution" as the number of 
visible pixels stored in the frame buffer.  The number of line pairs (cycles) 
actually resolved on the face of the display screen may be substantially less 
than the number of pixel pairs stored for each scan line, due to electrical 
and electro-optical filtering effects.  

Psychophysics

The fundamental development work for HDTV was done at at the NHK (Japan 
Broadcasting Corporation), after extensive psychophysical and perceptual 
research led by Dr. Takashi Fujio.  HDTV is capable of generating pictures 
substantially brighter, sharper, and of better colourimetry than 35 mm 
motion picture film.  

Many psycho-physical studies have shown that human viewers to position 
themselves relative to a scene such that the smallest detail of interest in 
the scene subtends an angle of about one minute (1/60 degrees) of arc, 
which is the limit of angular discrimination for normal vision.  For the 481 
visible lines of 525-line television the corresponding viewing distance is 
about 7 times picture height, and the horizontal viewing angle is about 11 
degrees.  For the 1035 visible lines of 1125-line HDTV, the corresponding 
viewing distance is 3.3 times screen height and the viewing angle is about 
28 degrees.  

Psychophysical research has shown that a viewer's involvement in a motion 
picture is increased when the picture is presented with a wide aspect ratio.  
The aspect ratio 16:9 has been chosen for HDTV.  This value, about 1.78:1, is 
nearly as wide as the most common theatrical film format of 1.85:1.  

The viewer of HDTV thus does not normally perceive increased "definition" 
(resolution) for the same size picture, but rather moves closer to the 
screen.  Thus HDTV should more properly be called "wide screen television", 
and some argue that this designation would also be more appropriate to 
consumer marketing and product differentiation than "HDTV".  

Recent NHK research has revealed that high-quality stereo sound impacts 
the psychophysical response of the viewer to the picture (in particular, the 
viewer's eye-tracking response).  

Quality

The picture quality of HDTV is superior to that of 35 mm film.  The limit to 
resolution of motion picture film is not the static resolution of the film, 
but judder and weave in the projector.  [35 mm motion picture film is 
conveyed vertically through the projector, and has an aspect ratio of 1.85:1, 
so the projected film area is only about 21 mm by 11 mm, compared to 36 
mm by 24 mm for slide or print film.]  Also, the colourimetry obtainable 
with the colour separation filters and CRT phosphors of a video system is 
greatly superior to that possible with the photochemical processes of a 
colour film system.  

The quality of various proposed transmission systems varies widely, and in 
some cases has yet to be demonstrated.  

The 1125/60 System

This section outines the basic parameters of the 1125/60 system.  More 
detailed information about the detailed parameters are available in an 
associated document.  

Broadcasters have proposed 1250/50 and 1050/59.94 systems in Europe and 
the U.S. respectively, based on "compatibility" with local broadcast 
standards.  No commercial equipment, and very little experimental 
equipment, exists for these standards.  Such systems will be outlined in a 
later section of this document.  

Basic Parameters of 1125/60 HDTV

The scanning parameters of 1125/60 are chosen to be closely related to 
525-line and 625-line systems:  The total line counts 1125, 625, and 525 
are odd multiples (45, 25, and 21 respectively) of 25.  Vertical blanking for 
each system is chosen to be exactly 8% (2/25) of the total line count, thus 
the active line counts 1035, 575, and 483 are the odd multiples (45, 25, and 
21 respectively) of 23.  

The target luminance bandwidth of HDTV is generally agreed to be 30 MHz, 
about five or six times the bandwidth of current broadcast television, 
although not all currently-available HDTV equipment can meet this 
bandwidth, and most of the proposed transmission systems cannot meet this 
bandwidth.  

SMPTE 240M Parameters

The basic parameters of the 1125-line HDTV system are contained in the 
ANSI/SMPTE 240M standard recently-adopted in the U.S., and are contained 
in Annex II to the international CCIR Report 801-2.  The basic parameters 
are as follows:  

  Number of scanning lines:  1125
  Number of active lines:    1035
  Field rate:                  60.00 Hz
  Interlace:                    2:1
  Aspect ratio:                16:9
  Samples per active line:   1920 for luminance (Y),  
                              960 for colour difference (U, V)

ANSI/SMPTE 240M specifies RGB or YUV components, with well-
characterized colourimetry and transfer functions.  Luminance bandwidth is 
specified as 30 MHz.  The signal has zero setup (pedestal), and includes a 
tri-level sync signal.  

1125/60 Equipment

Commercial hardware operating with the 1125-line system is widely 
available from Japanese manufacturers.  Equipment which is commercially 
available includes:  

 - video monitors (Sony, Hitachi, Ikegami, Barco); 
 - video projectors (Sony, Hitachi, Ikegami); 
 - cameras (Sony, Ikegami, Hitachi, BTS); 
 - videotape recorder (Sony); 
 - telecine [film-to-video] (Rank-Cintel); 
 - framestores (Sony, Asaca/Shiba-Soku, Toko); 
 - paintbox (Quantel); 
 - down-converter (Sony, Ikegami) 
 - switchers (Grass Valley Group, Sony); 
 - test equipment (Tektronix, Magni); and 
 - blue-screen matte (Ultimatte).  

1125-line equipment which has been demonstrated, but is not necessarily 
commercially-available, includes:

 - MUSE broadcast encoder, decoder (NHK); 
 - MUSE optical videodisc player (Sanyo, JVC); 
 - MUSE videocassette recorder (Hitachi); 
 - YUV videocassette recorder (Sony); 
 - YUV videodisc player (Sony); 
 - digital HDTV videotape recorders (Hitachi [648 Mb/s] and Sony 
     [1.188 Gb/s]); 
 - laser telecine (Sony, NHK) 
 - laser film recorder (NHK); and 
 - large-screen video projector (General Electric, Eidophor, Barco).  

Although current-generation 1125-line equipment is universally 2:1 
interlaced, there is general agreement that the industry will tend towards 
progressive (non-interlaced) systems for production and display.  Interlace 
may or may not be retained for transmission.  

HDTV APPLICATIONS

Commercial/Industrial/Scientific

It is generally thought that the initial application of HDTV will be in 
industrial, medical, and scientific applications where pickup, recording, and 
distribution of moving images is important, but where 525-line resolution 
is insufficient.  It is also likely that HDTV technology will contribute to 
printing and publishing applications, even though the images in that 
application are stills.  For example, Quantel sells their HDTV "Graphics 
Paintbox" to the printing and publishing industry.  

It is also quite likely that the 1125-line HDTV format will become an output 
format for computer graphics equipment.  There is a strong trend in 
computer graphics towards higher resolution, but no preferred format. The 
HDTV format (about 1 k by 2 k picture samples) satisfies the need for higher 
resolution and high colour accuracy, and offers the opportunity to exchange, 
record, and distribute images among various application areas.  Also, 1125-
line video monitors and projectors will rapidly benefit from the economies 
of scale of manufacture of monitors in large quantities for other 
applications, and this format is therefore a good choice.  

Film Production

HDTV is currently viable for production of material to be released on film.  
HDTV is equivalent (and in many respects superior) to 35 mm motion picture 
film.  Its acceptance as a production medium awaits the wider availability 
of HDTV production facilities, and more knowledge of HDTV production 
techniques on the part of the film production community. There are 
advantages in producing entertainment material in HDTV, even if the end 
product is to be down-converted to 525-line or 625-line television.  For 
example, it has been demonstrated that image compositing using Ultimatte 
can be done very effectively in HDTV.  

There are currently four commercial HDTV production studio facilities:  
Rebo Associates, Zbig Video, and 1125 Productions in New York, and Captain 
Video in Paris, France.  A facility in Los Angeles is being planned.  

Consumer

Broadcasting of HDTV is probably five to ten years distant, except in Japan.  
Broadcasting requires spectrum allocation, which is subject to domestic 
and international political concerns.  

IDTV ("improved definition") describes receiver techniques to improve the 
quality of standard NTSC or PAL broadcast signals.  A receiver is considered 
IDTV if it employs frame-rate doubling to eliminate inter-line twitter, although 
additional techniques such as noise reduction may also be employed.  IDTV 
receivers are currently on the market.  

EDTV ("enhanced definition") describes a 525-line or 625-line broadcast 
television signal with altered or augmented signal content which makes possible 
higher quality at consumer receivers.  A number of proposals for EDTV broadcast 
systems have ben made, but equipment will not be available until a decision of 
EDTV brooadcast standards is made.  

Consumer HDTV equipment also awaits standards.  It is certain that any consumer 
HDTV receiver equipment will include up-conversion capability, to display 
525-line or 625-line signals with improved quality.  

Distribution of high-quality material for consumers could take place using 
HDTV either through cable systems (in the manner of Home Box Office), or on 
consumer HDTV videocassette (for sale or rental), prior to use of HDTV for 
broadcast in either North America or Europe.  This approach to consumer 
HDTV may arise due to both the technical difficulty of HDTV broadcast 
(because of its large spectrum/bandwidth requirement), and the difficulties 
that the traditional broadcasting networks are likely to face in adopting 
HDTV.  Japan seems to be absolutely committed to HDTV broadcast in the 
near future.  It is certain that the primary origination medium for consumer 
HDTV in any form will initially be 35 mm motion picture film, due to the 
vast amount of existing material in that medium.  

Standards

Since it is now evident that there will be no single worldwide standard, 
discussions in the standards communities have now concentrated on three 
different areas:  production, distribution, and transmission.  Production is 
the shooting and assembling of program material, distribution is the 
exchange among program producers, and transmission is to the consumer.  

History

Various Japanese manufacturers exhibited HDTV equipment at the World's 
Fair at Tsukuba in 1985.  That equipment, and some of the equipment 
currently in experimental use around the world, has a picture aspect ratio of 
5:3 and the same 59.94 Hz field rate as 525-line NTSC television.  

Picture aspect ratio was changed 16:9, and field rate was changed to 
exactly 60.00 Hz in order to facilitate international agreement on 
standards, resulting in unanimous agreement to present a set of basic 
parameters to the CCIR Plenary session in June of 1986.  Adoption of these 
changes by the Japanese represented a major concession to the Europeans:  
tooling for the manufacture of CRT display tubes with 5:3 aspect ratio was 
already complete at a number of companies, and the field rate change 
required re-engineering of equipment.  The proposal was not accepted by the 
CCIR at that time, due to lack of agreement from the European members.  

The Europeans stated at the time that "serious" technical problems existed 
in the down-conversion of 60 Hz 1125-line HDTV to 50 Hz 625-line PAL, but 
both Sony and NHK developed and demonstrated extremely sophisticated 
down-converters prior to the 1986 CCIR Plenary Session. Experts viewing 
the 50 Hz output from these converters perceived no motion artifacts.  Many 
knowledgeable individuals believe that the European governments impeded 
the adoption of 1125-line HDTV in an attempt to protect their domestic 
studio and consumer equipment manufacturers.  Certainly no serious 
technical proposals for an alternative HDTV system have been presented by 
the Europeans, and only a very small quantity of experimental equipment has 
been built in Europe.  

The Europeans (and the Australians) have a political interest in not adopting 
HDTV at this time, due to their recent adoption of multiplexed analog 
component (MAC) encoding for direct broadcast from satellite (DBS) 
systems in these countries.  Receiver manufacturers now include MAC 
decoders in their new receivers, but consumers must install set-top 
converters for old receivers in order to receive MAC.  The European 
broadcasting community would find it embarrassing to require consumers to 
purchase a new converter for another new standard, just a few years after 
the introduction (with much fanfare) of MAC.  MAC is therefore currently 
being promoted in Europe as being capable of upgrade to HDTV (ED-MAC, for 
extended definition), but there are few serious technical proposals 
indicating how ths can be achieved, and no converters currently being 
delivered that can accommodate the signal formats being proposed.  

Production Standards

The ANSI/SMPTE 240M standard for an 1125-line Production system was 
adopted in the U.S. in February 1989.  Disclaimers on this document 
carefully delineate its applicability to production use only.  The standard 
essentially represents agreement on the detailed analog parameters of the 
1125/60 system.  Discussions on the digital representation of 1125-line HDTV 
are currently underway.  

Distribution Standards

The de facto international television program distribution standard is, 
surprisingly, 35 mm film.  

In North America, film is transferred to video using a "3-2 pulldown" 
scheme which scans alternately three then two video fields from successive 
film frames.  The film is run 0.1% slow to result in the 59.94 Hz field rate.  
In Europe, film is run 4% fast with 2-2 pulldown to result in 50 Hz frame 
rate.  

Discussions of distribution standards are in an early stage, but there is 
general agreement that film "friendliness" will be important.  

Transmission Standards

A transmission standard is likely to mandate some form of framestore in 
the receiver to minimize transmission bandwidth, and to provide for 
standard-television backward compatibility.  

All proposed transmission standards involve the reduction of transmission 
bandwidth by exploiting the spatio-temporal properties of the human visual 
system, as first characterized by Drs William and Karen Glenn.  
Fundamentally, spatial detail is transmitted at low frame rate, and the 
information transmitted at the high frame rate necessary to portray motion 
has low spatial detail.  

Japan

The Japan Broadcasting Corporation (NHK) in Japan is expected to commence 
HDTV broadcasting in 1992, using direct broadcasting from satellite (DBS) 
with the MUSE (MUltiple Sub-Nyquist Encoded) system.  MUSE is not 
compatible with any current broadcast system, and has a bandwidth of about 
8.4 MHz.  

North America

VHF and UHF spectrum is controlled in the U.S. by the FCC.  Many "proponents" 
of HDTV in the U.S. have asked the FCC to consider their systems for 
adoption as a U.S. standard.  

U.S. networks have proposed systems based on 1050-line, 59.94 Hz rasters, 
with a line rate of exactly twice that of the NTSC system, and about 966 
L/PH.  The claim is made that such systems are "compatible" with NTSC.  

Cable and satellite operators are unrestricted in their choice of 
transmission standards.  

It is quite conceivable that Japanese manufacturers could introduce 
consumer hardware prior to and quite independently of the choice of a broadcast 
standard.  

In any case, the vast majority of initial program material for consumer HDTV 
will be existing theatrical films from Hollywood.  

Europe

The standardization process in Europe is substantially different from the 
standardization process in North America.  Most broadcasting organizations 
are state-owned.  Standards are agreed by the European Broadcasting Union, 
which is a union of the broadcasters.  These meetings are closed; 
manufacturers (and other interested parties) attend only when invited.  

Systems based on 1250-lines and 50 Hz, with about 1152 L/PH, have been 
proposed by the Eureka-95 project in Europe.  

1125/60 Parameters Under Discussion

Although the combination of 1125 total lines, 60 Hz field rate, and 2:1 
interlace produces a line rate of exactly 33.75 kHz, and therefore a line 
time of about 29.63 us, neither the total number of samples per line nor the 
sampling frequency is specified in ANSI/SMPTE 240M or CCIR Rep. 801-2.  

Appendix II of CCIR Rep. 801 specifies 1920 luminance samples per "active" 
line, following the terminology of CCIR Recommendation 601-1, but the 
term "active" is not defined in either document.  In CCIR 601-1, it is 
implicit that some number of leading and trailing "active" samples are at 
blanking (or black) level, and some additional "active" samples are taken up 
by transition samples from blanking to video and video to blanking.  

Although the field rate of HDTV is exactly 60 Hz (emphasized by the "60.00" 
in the document), there is a movement in North America to accommodate 
operation at the NTSC field rate of 59.94 Hz, to maximize compatibility 
with existing NTSC equipment.  Some current HDTV equipment is 
configurable for operation at either rate.  

The Square Pixel Issue

Detailed parameters which have not yet been agreed upon are the sampling 
rate for digital HDTV systems, the number of "active" (non-blanking) digital 
samples per line, and the number of samples per picture width. These 
parameters are mutually interrelated, and should be related by simple 
integer ratios to the internationally-standardized digital sampling 
parameters for 525-line and 625-line television systems (in particular, the 
13.5 MHz sampling rate and the count of 720 "active" samples per line), as 
documented in CCIR Recommendation 601-1.  Poynton Vector has made a 
proposal for a sampling frequency of 70.875 MHz (2100 samples per total 
line) which achieves a sample aspect ratio which is exactly unity.  

One difficulty in the current discussion of possible parameter values for 
standardization is that nearly all manufacturers of HDTV equipment (and all 
manufacturers of cameras and VTRs) are Japanese.  Thus, North American 
and European contributions are made from a position lacking in experience.  

Also, Japanese manufacturers tend to design products which are highly 
optimized for particular application areas, rather than being of general use.  
For example, three independent efforts to build an HDTV CCD imaging chip have 
been described, and each has non-square pixels etched into the silicon.  It 
seems that the manufacturers expect these chips to be used only for 
entertainment television production applications, and are not interested in 
potential use of the same device in scientific and medical imaging applications 
for which square pixels are a necessity.  Efforts to develop flat panel 
displays using LCD, gas plasma, and light-valve technology are underway.  
These devices are also fabricated with a particular pixel aspect ratio, and 
would also have limited appeal in other application areas.  

Another problem is that all discussion is taking place within the traditional 
television constituency of broadcasters and broadcast studio equipment 
manufacturers.  Users in non-broadcast areas, potentially the largest users 
of HDTV in the two- to six-year time frame, are not represented at all.  
Thus the SMPTE is likely to recommend parameter values for 
standardization which are appropriate for broadcast applications, and not 
necessarily appropriate for other applications.  For example, the television 
constituency can maximize compatibility with existing NTSC equipment by 
choosing the NTSC frame rate of 59.94 Hz, but this rate would place a 
burden on non-broadcast users and European users, who would both prefer 
exactly 60 Hz.  

However, unless the concerns of non-broadcasters are expressed within the 
SMPTE, the broadcast-orientation will prevail, and by the time the impact of 
these issues is felt by the non-broadcast users it will be too late to change.