Direct broadcast satellite television
News •
Communications satellites located in geostationary orbit about the Earth are used to send television signals directly to the homes of viewers—a form of transmission called direct broadcast satellite (DBS) television. Transmission occurs in the Ku band, located around 12 gigahertz (12 billion cycles per second) in the radio frequency spectrum. At these high frequencies, the receiving antenna is a small dish only 46 cm (18 inches) in diameter. More than 100 programs are available over a single DBS service. Since competing services are not compatible, separate equipment is needed for each. Also, the receiving antenna must be carefully aimed at the appropriate satellite.
DBS transmission is digital. Normally, considerable bandwidth would be required for a digital television signal; however, by capitalizing on the redundancies inherent in a series of moving pictures, compression techniques reduce the transmission rate to 2–4 million bits per second. Decoding of the signal is performed by a set-top convertor box that is also connected to a telephone line. The telephone connection is used to send data about which shows are being watched and also to obtain permission to receive premium programs.
Teletext
Although relatively unknown in North America, teletext is routine throughout Europe. Teletext uses the vertical blanking interval (see the section The picture signal: Wave form) to send text and simple graphic information for display on the picture screen. The information is organized into pages that are sent repetitively, in a round-robin fashion; a few hundred pages can be sent in about one minute. The page selected by the viewer is recognized by electronic circuitry in the television receiver and then decoded for display. The information content is mostly of a timely, general interest, such as weather, news, sports, and television schedules. Graphics are formed from simple mosaics. The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) developed teletext and initiated teletext transmission in 1973. The BBC ended the service in 2012, but teletext is still used in several European countries.
Reception
At the television receiver the sound and picture carrier waves are picked up by the receiving antenna, producing currents that are identical in form to those flowing in the transmitter antenna but much weaker. These currents are conducted from the antenna to the receiver by a lead-in transmission line, typically a 12-mm (one-half-inch) ribbon of plastic in which are embedded two parallel copper wires. This form of transmission line is capable of passing the carrier currents to the receiver, without relative discrimination between frequencies, on all the channels to which the receiver may be tuned. Television signals also are delivered to the receiver over coaxial cable from a cable service provider or from a videocassette recorder. In addition, some television receivers have an input that bypasses the tuner and detector so that an unmodulated video signal can be viewed directly, in effect making the television receiver into a video display terminal.