Bit depth, Depth – Apple Final Cut Pro 7 User Manual

Page 1906

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Description

Sample ratio

Full sample rate for each color channel, plus a fourth alpha channel
at the full sample rate.

4:4:4:4

The color channels are subsampled so that the color resolution is
halved. For example, the first pixel in a line contains Y

, C

B

, and C

R

samples. The next pixel contains only a Y

sample. This pattern

repeats. Most professional video formats use 4:2:2 color subsampling.

4:2:2

4:2:2 sample rate for each color channel, plus an alpha channel at
the full sample rate.

4:2:2:4

The color is subsampled so that the color resolution is quartered.
The first pixel in a line contains Y

, C

B

, and C

R

samples. The next

three pixels only contain Y

samples. This pattern repeats.

4:1:1

This ratio indicates that the C

B

and C

R

channels are subsampled

both horizontally (as in 4:2:2) and vertically. This reduces color
resolution in both the horizontal and vertical dimensions compared
to 4:2:2, which only reduces horizontal chroma resolution.

There are several methods for locating C

B

and C

R

samples relative

to Y

samples, yielding several different 4:2:0 formats.

4:2:0

The following table shows a list of color sample ratios used in various digital video formats.

Video formats

Sample ratio

HDCAM SR

Most RGB computer graphics files (implicit)

4:4:4

Digital Betacam, D-1, D-5, DVCPRO HD, DVCPRO 50, and HDCAM
SR

4:2:2

HDCAM

3:1:1

NTSC DV, NTSC DVCAM, and DVCPRO

4:1:1

PAL DV, PAL DVCAM, DVD, and HDV

4:2:0

Bit Depth

The number of bits used per sample determines how accurately the sample is stored, as
well as how much intensity variation is possible within the signal. For example, a video
signal with a bit depth of only 1 bit can have a value of either 0 or 1, resulting in only
black or white pixels. Two bits per sample results in four possible values: 00, 01, 10, or 11,
or any of four shades of gray (or some other color) per sample.

Most digital video formats use a minimum of 8 bits per color channel, or 256 gradations
of intensity. RGB images are traditionally described by the total bits used per pixel (8 bits
per channel x 3 channels = 24 bits). 32-bit RGB images usually have 24-bit color plus 8
more bits for an alpha channel.

Note: Still images using 16 bits per color channel, or 48 bits per RGB pixel, are becoming
more common. However, most video formats use 8 or 10 bits per color channel.

1906

Appendix B

Video Formats

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