2. tv signal formats – Zenith DTV1080 User Manual

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2-2. TV Signal Formats

What makes HD digital signals (including SD signals) special is that they provide a high reso-

lution and wide format, like a movie (16:9 TV aspect ratio). On the other hand, analog signals

have the standard or normal format (4:3 TV aspect ratio). Thus, you receive programs with two

distinct formats. Like a wide movie screen, the HD digital signals are formatted more like the

way we actually see; our field of vision is more rectangular than square. So, when we view

movies in a wide screen format, the image fills more of our field of vision yielding a stronger

visual impact.

HD digital program signals use smaller pixels that are closer together. In the area taken up by

a single pixel of a standard NTSC signal, HD digital signals will have four and a half pixels,

four times the detail. The more pixels in a given area, the better the picture.

Some NTSC televisions can display a picture 720 pixels wide by 480 pixels high, that's a total

of 345,600 pixels. HD digital signals can have a resolution of 1920 x 1080, that's 2,073,600

pixels, or six times more pixels than the older resolution. Pictures will be crisper and cleaner,

with more detail in every close-up and every panorama.

Standards Comparison Table

Signal Format

Total Lines

Active Lines

Sound

Aspect Ratio

Max Resolution

Analog (NTSC)

HD Digital (ATSC/DIRECTV

)

1125

1080

Surround (5.1 ch)

16 : 9

1920 X 1080

525

480

Stereo (2 ch)

4 : 3

720 X 480

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