Ensemble Designs BrightEye 5 Analog Composite TBC and Frame Sync User Manual

Page 20

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BrightEye 5 - Page 20

5

Analog Composite TBC and Frame Sync User Guide

additional bit of resolution will double the number of different states that can be represented. Systems

that operate with a greater number of bits of resolution, or quantization, will be able to capture a

signal with more detail or fidelity. Thus, a video digitizer with 12 bits of resolution will capture 4 times

as much detail as one with 10 bits.

Blanking

The Horizontal and Vertical blanking intervals of a television signal refer to the time periods between

lines and between fields. No picture information is transmitted during these times, which are required

in CRT displays to allow the electron beam to be repositioned for the start of the next line or field.

They are also used to carry synchronizing pulses which are used in transmission and recovery of the

image. Although some of these needs are disappearing, the intervals themselves are retained for

compatibility purposes. They have turned out to be very useful for the transmission of additional

content, such as teletext and embedded audio.

CAV

Component Analog Video. This is a convenient shorthand form, but it is subject to confusion. It is

sometimes used to mean ONLY color difference component formats (SMPTE or Beta), and other times

to include RGB format. In any case, a CAV signal will always require 3 connectors – either Y/R-Y/B-Y,

or R/G/B.

Checkfield

A Checkfield signal is a special test signal that stresses particular aspects of serial digital transmission.

The performance of the Phase Locked-Loops (PLLs) in an SDI receiver must be able to tolerate long

runs of 0’s and 1’s. Under normal conditions, only very short runs of these are produced due to a

scrambling algorithm that is used. The Checkfield, also referred to as the Pathological test signal, will

“undo” the scrambling and cause extremely long runs to occur. This test signal is very useful for testing

transmission paths.

Chroma

The color or chroma content of a signal, consisting of the hue and saturation of the image.

See also Color Difference.

Component

In a component video system, the totality of the image is carried by three separate but related

components. This method provides the best image fidelity with the fewest artifacts, but it requires

three independent transmission paths (cables). The commonly used component formats are

Luminance and Color Difference (Y/Pr/Pb), and RGB. It was far too unwieldy in the early days of color

television to even consider component transmission.

Composite

Composite television dates back to the early days of color transmission. This scheme encodes the

color difference information onto a color subcarrier. The instantaneous phase of the subcarrier is the

color’s hue, and the amplitude is the color’s saturation or intensity. This subcarrier is then added onto

the existing luminance video signal. This trick works because the subcarrier is set at a high enough

frequency to leave spectrum for the luminance information. But it is not a seamless matter to pull

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