| List of digital video broadcast standards |
| DVB family (Europe) |
| DVB-S (satellite) |
DVB-T (terrestrial)
|
| DVB-C (cable) |
DVB-H (handheld)
|
| ATSC family (North America) |
| ATSC (terrestrial/cable) |
| ATSC-M/H (mobile/handheld) |
| ISDB family (Japan/Brazil) |
| ISDB-S (satellite) |
| ISDB-T (terrestrial) |
| ISDB-C (cable) |
| SBTVD (Brazil) |
| DMB Family (Korea) |
| T-DMB (terrestrial) |
| S-DMB (satellite) |
| Codecs |
| Video |
| Audio |
| Frequency bands |
| VHF |
| UHF |
| SHF |
DVB-T2 is an abbreviation for Digital Video Broadcasting – Second Generation Terrestrial; it is the upcoming extension of the existing standard DVB-T, issued by the European-based consortium DVB, devised for the broadcast transmission of digital terrestrial television. This system transmits compressed digital audio, video, and other data in Physical Layer Pipes (PLPs), using OFDM modulation with concatenated channel coding and interleaving.
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In March 2006 DVB decided to study options for an upgraded DVB-T standard. In June 2006, a formal study group named TM-T2 (Technical Module on Next Generation DVB-T) was established by the DVB Group to develop an advanced modulation scheme that could be adopted by a second generation digital terrestrial television standard, to be named DVB-T2.[1]
According to the commercial requirements and call for technologies [2] issued in April 2007, the first phase of DVB-T2 will be devoted to provide optimum reception for stationary (fixed) and portable receivers (i.e., units which can be nomadic, but not fully mobile) using existing aerials, whereas a second and third phase will study methods to deliver higher payloads (with new aerials) and the mobile reception issue. The novel system should provide a minimum 30% increase in payload, under similar channel conditions already used for DVB-T.
The BBC, ITV, Channel 4 and Five have agreed with the regulator Ofcom to convert one UK multiplex (B, or PSB3) to DVB-T2 to increase capacity for HDTV via DTT.[3] They expect the first TV region to use the new standard will be Granada in November 2009 (with existing switched over regions being changed at the same time). It is expected that over time there will be enough DVB-T2 receivers sold to switch all DTT transmissions to DVB-T2, and H.264.
Ofcom published its final decision on April 3. 2008 for HDTV using DVB-T2 and MPEG-4 AVC [4]: BBC HD will have one HD slot after DSO at Granada. ITV and C4 have as expected applied to Ofcom for the 2 additional HD slots available from 2009 to 2012 (C3 + C4 and partners)
Ofcom has indicated that it has found an unused channel covering 3.7 million households in London that can be used to broadcast the DVB-T2 HD multiplex from 2010 i.e. before DSO in London. Ofcom has indicated that they will look for more unused UHF channels in other parts of the UK, that can be used for the DVB-T2 HD multiplex from 2010 until DSO 2.19
The following characteristics have been devised for the T2 standard:
For instance, a UK MFN DVB-T profile (64-QAM, 2k mode, coding rate 2/3, guard interval 1/32) and a DVB-T2 equivalent (256-QAM, 32k, coding rate 3/5, guard interval 1/128) allows for an increase in bit rate from 24.13 Mbit/s to 35.4 Mbit/s (+46.5%). Another example, for an Italian SFN DVB-T profile (64-QAM, 8k, coding rate 2/3, guard interval 1/4) and a DVB-T2 equivalent (256-QAM, 32k, coding rate 3/5, guard interval 1/16), achieves an increase in bit rate from 19.91 Mbit/s to 33.3 Mbit/s (+67%).[6]
The DVB-T2 draft standard ratified by the DVB Steering Board on June 26, 2008,[7] and published on the DVB homepage as DVB-T2 standard BlueBook,[8] has been handed over to the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) by DVB.ORG on June 20, 2008.[9] The ETSI process will take until April 25, 2009, when the final standard will be published. The ETSI process has several phases, but the only changes expected - if any - will be text clarifications. DVB-T2 modulators are on the market and receiver chips are under development. Prototype receivers were shown in September 2008 at the IBC08 in Amsterdam.
Since the DVB-T2 physical layer specification is complete, and there will be no further technical enhancements, receiver VLSI chip design has been started with confidence in stability of specification. A draft PSI/SI (program and system information) specification document has been agreed with the DVB-TM-GBS group.
The first test from a real TV-transmitter was performed by the BBC Research & Innovation in the last weeks of June 2008[10] using channel 53 from the Guildford transmitter, southwest of London: BBC had developed and built the modulator/demodulator prototype in parallel with the DVB-T2 standard being drafted.
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