Standard Handbook of Video and Television Engineering, Volume 2Since its publication in February of 2000, the Standard Handbook of Video and Television Engineering has becomes its field's standard reference, the one book every engineer and technician in broadcasting needs to own. By carefully tracking the field's movement from monolithic broadcast stations into a complex web of smaller stations and video producers, this book has stayed relevant while its competition has fallen by the wayside. This new edition features over 50% new material, most crucially multiple chapters on video networking technologies, new digital television and data broadcast standards (for both the US and Europe), and updates on every aspect of video and broadcast equipment and protocols. |
Contents
Color Vision Representation and Reproduction | 2-1 |
Optical Components and Systems | 3-1 |
Digital Coding and Signal Processing | 4-1 |
Copyright | |
12 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Standard Handbook of Video and Television Engineering Jerry Whitaker,Blair Benson No preview available - 2003 |
Common terms and phrases
amplifier analog angle applications ATSC audio bandwidth basic beam blanking block diagram broadcast cable camera Cathode Ray Tube chromaticity chrominance circuit coefficients color Colorimetry component composite video compression connector crosspoint decoder deflection devices display electron elements encoding Engineering equipment facility fiber field film filter format frame frequency function ground HDTV high-definition television horizontal IEEE input interface lens light linear luminance macroblock magnetic modulation NTSC ofthe operation optical output Overland Park panel parameters phosphor picture pixel plasma display production progressive scanning Projection pulse quantization rack recording resolution result sampling scanning screen shadow-mask shown in Figure SMPTE specific SPIE standard subcarrier switch switcher sync tape telecine television tion track transform transmission transmitted tube typically values vertical video signal voltage wavelength White Plains