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

Page 23

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BrightEye 5 - Page 23

5

Analog Composite TBC and Frame Sync User Guide

IEC

The International Electrotechnical Commission provides a wide range of worldwide standards. They

have provided standardization of the AC power connection to products by means of an IEC line cord.

The connection point uses three flat contact blades in a triangular arrangement, set in a rectangular

connector. The IEC specification does not dictate line voltage or frequency. Therefore, the user must

take care to verify that a device either has a universal input (capable of 90 to 230 volts, either 50 or

60 Hz), or that a line voltage switch, if present, is set correctly.

Interlace

Human vision can be fooled to see motion by presenting a series of images, each with a small change

relative to the previous image. In order to eliminate the flicker, our eyes need to see more than 30

images per second. This is accomplished in television systems by dividing the lines that make up

each video frame (which run at 25 or 30 frames per second) into two fields. All of the odd-numbered

lines are transmitted in the first field, the even-numbered lines are in the second field. In this way, the

repetition rate is 50 or 60 Hz, without using more bandwidth. This trick has worked well for years, but

it introduces other temporal artifacts. Motion pictures use a slightly different technique to raise the

repetition rate from the original 24 frames that make up each second of film—they just project each

one twice.

IRE

Video level is measured on the IRE scale, where 0 IRE is black, and 100 IRE is full white. The actual

voltages that these levels correspond to can vary between formats.

ITU-R 601

This is the principal standard for standard definition component digital video. It defines the luminance

and color difference coding system that is also referred to as 4:2:2. The standard applies to both PAL

and NTSC derived signals. They both will result in an image that contains 720 pixels horizontally, with

486 vertical pixels in NTSC, and 576 vertically in PAL. Both systems use a sample clock rate of 27 MHz,

and are serialized at 270 Mb/s.

Jitter

Serial digital signals (either video or audio) are subject to the effects of jitter. This refers to the

instantaneous error that can occur from one bit to the next in the exact position of each digital

transition. Although the signal may be at the correct frequency on average, in the interim it varies.

Some bits come slightly early, others come slightly late. The measurement of this jitter is given

either as the amount of time uncertainty or as the fraction of a bit width. For 270 Mb/s SD video, the

allowable jitter is 740 picoseconds, or 0.2 UI (Unit Interval – one bit width). For 1.485 Gb/s HD, the

same 0.2UI spec corresponds to just 135 pico seconds.

Luminance

The “black & white” content of the image. Human vision had more acuity in luminance, so television

systems generally devote more bandwidth to the luminance content. In component systems, the

luminance is referred to as Y.

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