Dolby Digital Plus (DD+ or E-AC-3), is a digital audio compression scheme developed specifically for the introduction of HD DVD and Blu-ray Disc. It is a development of the earlier Dolby Digital system. E-AC-3 has a number of improvements aimed at increasing quality at a given bitrate compared with legacy Dolby Digital (AC-3). While legacy AC-3 supports up to 5 full-range audio channels at a coded bitrate of 0.640 Mbit/s, E-AC-3 supports up to 13 full range audio channels at a coded bitrate of 6.144 Mbit/s peak.
Dolby Digital Plus bitstreams are not backward compatible with legacy Dolby Digital decoders. However, all players capable of outputting Dolby Digital Plus over SPDIF are required to be able to transform the decoded-audio into a backwards compatible AC-3 signal 0.640 Mbit/s, for compatibility with legacy Dolby Digital equipment.[1]
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The codec used by Dolby digital plus is based on the original Dolby Digital codec, but with several enhancements to improve coding efficiency:
Dolby claims that these changes can result in bitrate improvements of up to 50% while still allowing for the signal to be efficiently converted to Dolby Digital for backwards compatibility.[2]
As of 2007[update], HDMI 1.3 is the only means to transport a raw DD+ bitstream between two pieces of consumer equipment. The older and more widespread TOSLINK and S/PDIF-interfaces cannot transport DD+ bitstreams, though as previously mentioned, Dolby's compatibility stipulation guarantees a SPDIF-equipped player is at least capable of transcoding the DD+ bitstream into an AC-3 bitstream. See the section below on downmixing.
The maximum number of discrete coded channels is the same for both formats: 7.1.[3] However, HD DVD and Blu-ray impose different technical constraints on the supported audio-codecs. Hence, the usage of DD+ differs substantially between HD DVD and Blu-ray.
| Codec | HD DVD | Blu-ray | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Decoding | Channels | Bitrate | Decoding | Channels | Bitrate | |
| AC-3 | mandatory | 1 to 5.1 | 504 kbit/s | mandatory | 1 to 5.1 | 640 kbit/s |
| E-AC-3 | mandatory | 1 to 7.1 | 3.0 Mbit/s | optional | 6.1 to 7.1 | 1.7 Mbit/s |
| TrueHD | mandatory optional |
1 or 2 3 to 8 |
18.0 Mbit/s 18.0 Mbit/s |
optional | 1 to 8 | 18.0 Mbit/s |
On HD DVD, DD+ is designated a mandatory audio-codec. An HD DVD movie may use DD+ as the primary (or only) audio track. An HD DVD player is required to support DD+ audio by decoding and outputting it to the player's output jacks. As stored on disc, the DD+ bitstream can carry for any number of audio-channels up to the maximum allowed, at any bitrate up to 3.0 Mbit/s.
On Blu-ray Disc, DD+ is an optional codec, and is deployed as an extension to a "core" AC-3 5.1 audiotrack. The AC-3 core is encoded at 640 kbit/s, carries 5 primary channels (and 1 LFE), and is independently playable as a movie audio track by any Blu-ray player. The DD+ extension bitstream is used on players that support it by replacing the rear channels in the 5.1 setup with higher fidelity versions, along with providing a possible channel extension to 6.1 or 7.1. The complete audio track is allowed a combined bitrate of 1.7 Mbit/s: 640 kbit/s for the AC-3 5.1 core, and 1 Mbit/s for the DD+ extension. During playback, both the core and extension bitstreams contribute to the final audio-output, according to rules embedded in the bitstream metadata.[4]
As of 2006, a DD+ bitstream can only be transported over an HDMI v1.3 link. Connecting players to audio receivers is problematic, as HDMI-audio is not yet a standard feature on mainstream consumer A/V receivers. Delivery of DD+ encoded audio, between the audio-source and audio-receiver, is accomplished in one of the following ways:
Of the above methods, only the decoding method is mandatory for all decoder implementations, though most decoder implementations with SPDIF/TOSLINK output also support the 3rd method. Thus far, delivery methods (of DD+) have favored the 2nd and 3rd methods. Beyond basic compliance with the DD+ specification, some models of HD DVD players can also transcode DD+ to DTS-audio.
Blu-ray players do not downmix DD+ content to AC-3, for the simple reason that the Blu-ray format mandates the DD+ audiotrack must be accompanied by a separate, core AC-3 bitstream. Furthermore, the Blu-ray spec allows the disc's individual audiotracks to be output directly (without modification/decompression). Hence, a DD+ Blu-ray title always gives the user the option to play the core AC-3 audiotrack, ensuring compatibility with all Blu-ray players.
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