How Digital Television Works

If you’ve looked at television sets at any of the big electronics retailers in the United States lately, you know that digital TV, or DTV, is a big deal right now. Most stores have whole areas devoted to digital TV sets. You’re also hearing a lot about four other topics:

Digital Television
Unless you are among the people in the United States who have purchased a DTV set, what you have in your living room is a normal analog TV that seems to be working just fine despite all the hype. ­ Most people, faced with this level of product proliferation, can only ask, “What the heck is going on here?!”
On June 12, 2009, television stations in the United States completed the transition from analog to digital broadcasting. Consumers receiving local television signals over analog antennas now must use converter boxes to receive programming on their TVs. This deadline was pushed back several times in the last few years because of both broadcasters’ and consumers’ inability to meet the FCC’s criteria for a successful transition to digital broadcasting.
The change was last scheduled to take place on Feb. 17, 2009, but was pushed back one final time to allow more people to purchase new TVs or converter boxes to allow them to make the transition. Some stations, however, switched to digital broadcasting in February 2009 anyhow because they’d already contracted time to broadcast on digital transmitters and staying analog would require a costly budgetary adjustment.

Understanding Analog TV

To understand digital TV, it’s helpful to understand analog TV so that you can see the differences. (If you’ve read How Television Works, then you know how analog TV works).
The analog TV standard has been in use in the United States for about 50 years. To review quickly, here are the basics of analog television transmission:

  • A video camera takes a picture of a scene. It does this at a frame rate of 30 frames per second.
  • The camera rasterizes the scene. That is, the camera turns the picture into rows of individual dots called pixels. Each pixel is assigned a color and intensity.
  • The rows of pixels are combined with synchronization signals, called horizontal sync and vertical sync signals, so that the electronics inside a TV set will know how to display the rows of pixels.

This final signal, containing the color and intensity of each pixel in a set of rows, along with horizontal and vertical sync signals, is called a composite video signal. Sound is completely separate. When you look on the back of your VCR and you see the yellow plug, that’s the plug for composite video. Sound is either a white plug (on VCRs that do not handle stereo sound) or a red plug and a white plug (on VCRs that do handle stereo).
There are lots of different things you can do with a composite video signal and a sound signal. Here are just a few:

  • You can broadcast them as radio waves. When you attach an antenna to your TV set and pick up local stations for free, you’re receiving broadcast television from local TV stations.
  • You can record them with a VCR.
  • You can transmit them through a cable TV system along with hundreds of other composite signals.

Many different kinds of equipment understand composite video signals.
When a composite video signal is broadcast over the airwaves by a TV station, it happens on a specific frequency. In the United States, we know these frequencies as VHF channels 2 through 13 and UHF channels 14 through 83.
The composite video signal is transmitted as an AM signal and the sound as an FM signal on these channels. See How TV Works for details on transmission, and How Radio Works for details on AM and FM. The FCC allocated three bands of frequencies in the radio spectrum, chopped into 6-MHz slices, to accommodate these TV channels:

  • 54 to 88 MHz for Channels 2 to 6
  • 174 to 216 MHz for Channels 7 through 13
  • 470 to 890 MHz for UHF Channels 14 through 83

When your VCR wants to display its signal on a normal analog TV, it takes the composite video signal and the sound signal off the tape and then modulates those signals onto a 60-MHz (channel 3) or 66-MHz (channel 4) carrier, just like a TV station would. Instead of broadcasting it, however, the VCR sends it straight to the TV. A cable box or satellite box does the same thing.
Right now you hear a lot about “digital satellite systems” and “digital cable systems.” The set-top box receives a digital signal from the satellite or cable; the box then converts that signal to an analog signal and sends it to your analog TV. That’s why if you’re a digital cable or satellite TV subscriber, your provider probably told you that the June 2009 DTV transition wouldn’t require you to buy new equipment.
True digital TV, on the other hand, is completely digital and involves:

  • Digital cameras working at a much higher resolution than analog cameras
  • Digital transmission
  • Digital display at a much higher resolution

For more Detail: How Digital Television Works


About The Author

Ibrar Ayyub

I am an experienced technical writer holding a Master's degree in computer science from BZU Multan, Pakistan University. With a background spanning various industries, particularly in home automation and engineering, I have honed my skills in crafting clear and concise content. Proficient in leveraging infographics and diagrams, I strive to simplify complex concepts for readers. My strength lies in thorough research and presenting information in a structured and logical format.

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