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dvb transmission

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https://erg.abdn.ac.uk/future-net/digital-video/dvb-trans.html

DVB Transmission
DVB builds upon MPEG-2 and uses MPEG-2 Transmission. It also defines additional private sections and
providing a definition of the physical medium (modulation, coding, etc) needed to carry the MPEG-2
Transport Streams.

Typical Streams carried in a DVB Terrestrial Transport Multiplex


Each MPEG-2 MPTS multiplex carries a number of streams which in combination deliver the required
services. Here is a sample break-down of the various MPEG-2 streams being used to provide a terrestrial
24 Mbps TV multiplex:
Stream

bit rate (kbps)

SI

300

PSI

546

Digital Teletext

754

Total per Mux

1600

Sample per-multiplex overheads


Stream

bit rate (kbps)

TV Video *
Stereo Audio

5000
270

SubTitles

50

Conditional
Access

600

Total
Programme

5920

Bit rate per programme


(* Video at 4-6 Mbps depending on content, Conditional Access may not be required)
This allows a standard 8 MHz channel to carry 5 TV channels or 4 higher quality channels without
conditional access - or 3 high quality channels with conditional access. The remaining bandwidth may be
used for other services such as Electronic Programme Guides (EPGs), Audio Descriptions for the visually
impaired (~ 70 kbps), Signing for the deaf (~ 400 kbps using a separate window), house pages, digital data,
software down-loads, etc.

DVB Bearer Networks


The DVB standards allows a DVB signal to be carried over a range of bearer networks. Various standards
have evolved which define transmission over particular types of link:
DVB-S (Satellite) ETS 300 421 (Digital Satellite Transmission Systems)
DVB-T (Terrestrial) ETS 300 744 ( Digital Terrestrial Transmission Systems)
Interfaces to Plesiochronous Digital Hierarchy (PDH) networks (prETS 300 813).
Interfaces to Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (SDH) networks (prETS 300 814).
Interfaces to Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) networks (prETS 300 815).

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dvb transmission

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Interfaces for CATV/SMATV Headends and similar Professional Equipment (EN50083-9)

Digital Satellite TV (DVB-S)


Satellite transmission has lead the way in delivering digital TV to viewers. A typical satellite channel has
36 MHz bandwidth, which may support transmission at up to 35-40 Mbps (assuming delivery to a 0.5m
receiving antenna) using Quadrature Phase Shift Keying (QPSK) modulation.
The video, audio, control data and user data are all formed into fixed sized MPEG-2 transport packets. The
MPEG TS packets are grouped into 8 packet frames (1503 B). The frames do not have any additional
control information, but to enable the receiver to find the start of each frame, the TS-header byte is
inverted (0xB8) in the first TS packet of each frame. The frames are then passed through a convolutional
(organ-pipe) interleaver to ensure the data follows an approximately random pattern, assuring frequency
dispersion of the modulated signal. At the start of each frame, the scrambler is re-initialised.
16 bytes of Reed Solomon (RS) coding are added to each 188 byte transport packet to provide Forward
Error Correction (FEC) using a RS(204,188,8) code. For the satellite transmission, the resultant bit stream
is then interleaved and convolutional coding is applied. The level of coding ranges from 1/2 to 7/8
depending on the intended application and available bandwidth. The digital bit stream is then modulated
using QPSK modulation.
The complete coding process may be summarised by:
Inverting every 8th Synchronisation byte
Scrambling the contents of each packet
Reed-Solomon (RS) coding at 8% overhead
Interleaved convolutional coding (the level of coding ranges from 1/2 to 7/8 depending on the
intended application)
The resulting bit stream is modulated using Quadrature Phase Shift Keying (QPSK).
See also: Broadband Multimedia Satellite Systems

UK Digital Terrestrial TV Network (DVB-T)


Legislation passed in 1996, has opened the way to allow new companies to enter the terrestrial TV market,
while protecting the interest of the main players. This lead to the granting of licences to various companies
during 1997, and the planned roll-out of the first direct-to-home digital terrestrial services during
November 1998.
In the UK, a standard TV channel is 8 MHz wide, accommodating the TV signal in Phase Alternate Line
(PAL) format and the sound subcarrier. The same 8 MHz of bandwidth may be used to provide a 24 Mbps
digital transmission path using Coded Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (COFDM) modulation.
This may support up to 6 digital TV channels.
The information is transmitted in the following manner:
COFDM or Quadrature Phase Modulation (QPSK) (COFDM uses either 1705 carriers (usually
known as '2k'), or 6817 carriers ('8k'))
Reed-Solomon (RS) coding at 8% overhead
Interleaved convolutional coding (the level of coding depends on the intended application)
Some countries have chosen to use introduce a digital TV service which is based on more robust
modulation, allowing mobile reception of the signal, or to pilot high definition TV - in both cases the
bandwidth (number of channels) has been traded.

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The UK will initially be providing 6 terrestrial TV multiplexes. These will be received in various parts of
the UK. Some areas will receive all the multiplexes, while others will receive only one. Many parts of the
UK will not be able initially to receive digital terrestrial TV, although these areas are generally sparsely
populated. Satellite TV will also carry the terrestrial programmes.
Multiplex

Coverage (%
homes)

Programmes

1. BBC

90%

BBC1, BBC2, Choice,News24

2.

90%

ITV, CH4, ITV2

3.

90%

S4C, C5, ...

4. BDB

88%

Subscription-based + Home shopping

5. BDB

77%

Subscription-based + Home shopping

6. BDB

69%

Subscription-based + Home shopping

See also :
MPEG-2
MPEG-2 Decoders and Encoders
MPEG-2 Transmission
Digital Video Broadcasting (DVB)
MPEG-2 and DVB Standards
DVB Receivers
DVB Transmission (this page)
Data Transmission & DSM-CC
Index to Digital TV Pages
Future Networks Research

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