Digital broadcasting demonstrations by HD-SAT and dttb at Montreux 95

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igital broadcasting demonstrations by H-SAT and dttb at Montreux 95 A. Oliphant (BBC) L. Combarel (Alcatel Espace) Two RACE projects on show at Montreux 95 H-SAT and dttb gave the first complete integrated demonstration of MPEG-2 digital television broadcasting terrestrially, by cable and by satellite. Visitors to the stand were able to watch four widescreen STV or one HTV programme being broadcast in an 8 MHz UH channel, in a single-frequency network. Another demonstration showed a very high-quality HTV programme being broadcast via a satellite channel in the 20 GHz band, with a fallback operation which allowed graceful picture degradation if the HTV signal could not be received satisfactorily due to heavy rainfall. A third demonstration showed the terrestrial and satellite signals being broadcast, without loss of quality, over the Montreux cable television network. 1. ntroduction Two projects in the EC-sponsored RACE programme H-SAT and dttb collaborated to give an ambitious demonstration in the uture Technology Hall at the 19th Montreux TV Symposium and Exhibition. The demonstration showed MPEG-2 coded signals standard definition (STV) with stereo sound, and HTV with surround-sound transmitted over terrestrial, satellite and cable networks. This is believed to be the first complete integrated demonstration to show the compatibility of MPEG-2 signals with all these broadcast media. As shown in ig. 1, both these RACE projects include broadcasters, equipment manufacturers and telecomms operators among their partners; the Original language: English. Manuscript received 19/6/95. 43

igure 1 Partners in the RACE projects, H-SAT and dttb. Alcatel Espace Alcatel talia Alenia Spazio BBC CCETT EBU (sponsoring partner) RT North West Labs Ltd RA Barco BBC CCETT eutsche orschunganstalt für Luft und Raumfahrt Z der eutschen Bundespost Telekom RT taltel TC H-SAT Consortium RL dttb Consortium B Star Telematics T Thomson CS University of Salford RL Additional sponsorship support to H-SAT includes : eutsche Bundespost Telekom (), The European Space Agency, Telespazio () and RTE (RL). PESA Electronica Philips RA Retevisión Seleco Telecom enmark Thomson Group E NL// E K // Associated partners who support dttb include rance Télécom, T and the EBU. EBU is an Associate Partner in both projects. dttb is studying all aspects of digital terrestrial broadcasting [1]. H-SAT is studying the satellite broadcasting of HTV in the 20-GHz band which was allocated by WARC-92 for digital HTV broadcasting [2]. A paper published in the Symposium Record [3] gives some of the background to the demonstrations; the present paper aims to document what was actually demonstrated. More technical details of the work of the two projects are given in [4], [5] and [6]. 2. The joint H-SAT / dttb demonstration The joint H-SAT/dTTb demonstration at Montreux consisted of a complete broadcast chain, from the sound and picture sources at the input, through to the television monitors and loudspeakers in the viewing room. The broadcast chain included: a satellite link via S1 Kopernicus; a UH transmission in Channel 49 from Thollon, on the other side of Lake Geneva; a rebroadcast transmission from Clarens, just west of Montreux; distribution of the received satellite and terrestrial signals along the Montreux cable network. 2.1. Specification of coding and modulation An overview of the broadcast chain is shown in ig. 2. t included the following two basic functions: picture and sound coding and multiplexing; channel coding and modulation for the transmission segment. The MPEG-2 picture and sound coding / multiplexing (and demultiplexing / decoding) was developed by H-SAT. This equipment, which was used by both the H-SAT and dttb projects, was configured either as one HTV codec or four STV codecs. or dttb, the MPEG-2 transport stream can contain four independent STV programmes or a single HTV programme, in both cases at the same net transport stream bit-rate. or H-SAT, the transport stream contains both an HTV and an STV picture component of the same HTV programme source; the latter is used to support the graceful degradation feature of the satellite modulation. n all cases the STV picture components are associated with MPEG-2 stereo sound, while the HTV component has an associated MPEG-2 layer 5-channel surround-sound component. The channel modulation for dttb is coded orthogonal frequency division multiplex (COM) in a standard 8 MHz UH channel. The COM signal can be received off-air at a cable head end and 44

transposed to any convenient channel for distribution over a cable network. A draft specification for a COM system has been prepared by the VB project. However, the equipment used in the demonstration was designed before the VB-T specification was available; details of the channel coding and modulation actually used in the dttb demonstration, and the corresponding parameters of the VB-T specification are given in ig. 3. A two-layered satellite modulation scheme is used for H-SAT [7], in order to support the graceful degradation operation needed to maintain service continuity for broadcasting in the 30/20 GHz satellite frequency band, where signals are occasionally subject to attenuation by heavy rainfall. A time multiplex of a bandwidth-efficient, but less robust modulation (TCM-8PSK, applied to the HTV components) and a less bandwidth-efficient but very robust modulation (QPSK with Turbo-Code, applied to the STV fallback components) is implemented. When atmospheric receiving conditions begin to degrade (passage of a rainstorm, for example), the robust modulation layer and the associated STV fallback programme can continue to be received after the less robust modulation layer fails. Thus the service degrades gracefully to STV during certain periods of bad weather. The operation of this two-level graceful degradation, as a function of the theoretical received satellite C/N, is illustrated in ig. 4. H-SAT also supports delivery of its HTV service over standard TV cable networks. The modulation at the cable head-end is a three step process. irst, the satellite signal is received using a dish larger than would be used for direct-to-home reception, in order to assure service continuity at HTV quality. The MPEG-2 transmultiplexer removes the fall-back components of the MPEG-2 transport stream which are not needed for the HTV service in the cable segment, thus creating a new transport stream. This new transport stream is Reed-Solomon encoded and modulated at a bit- igure 2 Configuration of the H-SAT / dttb joint demonstration. S1 Kopernikus satellite 20 GHz 30 GHz own converter Up converter SH link Up converter Rx Converter UH Tx Thollon Channel 49 UH Tx Converter Satellite emodulator MPEG-2 Transmultiplexer Cable modulator 2-layer modulator Terrestrial modulator Cable adapter Montreux cable network MPEG-2 multiplexer MPEG-2 TS STV & HTV MPEG-2 Coders Picture and sound sources Portable antenna Output to picture monitors and loudspeakers UH Rx Clarens Terrestrial demodulator STV & HTV MPEG-2 deoders Converter MPEG-2 demultiplexer 4 STV or 1 HTV Cable demodulator 1 HTV 1 HTV + 1 STV 45

dttb characteristics Montreux demonstration VB-T draft specification igure 3 Main technical characteristics of the dttb system used at Montreux, compared with the VB-T draft specification. Signal input MPEG-2 transport stream MPEG-2 transport stream Outer coding R-S (204, 188, t=8), interleaved to R-S (204, 188, t=8), interleaved to depth 12 depth 12 nner coding Convolutional turbo-code of rate 2/3 Punctured convolutional code with allowing for iterative decoding, time rates 1/2, 2/3, 3/4, 5/6 and 7/8, and frequency interleaved frequency interleaved Modulation COM COM All carriers are 64-QAM with Gray mapping All carriers in one OM frame are either QPSK, 16-QAM, 64-QAM, non-uniform 16-QAM or nonuniform 64-QAM with Gray mapping emodulation Pilot driven Pilot driven Synchronization edicated symbols edicated symbols Number of carriers 896 6785 Carrier spacing 7.8 khz 1.1 khz Guard interval 32 s 224 s, 112 s, 28 s Total symbol duration 160 s 1120 s, 1008 s, 924 s Signal bandwidth 7 000 000 Hz 7 571 428 Hz Bit-rate (payload) 18.97 Mbit/s rom 4.7 Mbit/s to 32.05 Mbit/s, depending on the modulation options chosen to suit the channel characteristics igure 4 Two-level graceful degradation operation of the H-SAT system. Picture quality HTV allback Service interruption rate of 45 Mbit/s in an 8 MHz cable channel, using a similar 64-QAM as specified for VB (but the roll-off is sharper when compared with the VB specification). The parameters of the H-SAT prototypes which were demonstrated are summarized in ig. 5. 2-level hierarchical system Conventional system 2 0 5 10 C/N ratio (db) in 36 MHz 2.2. ormat of the demonstration The demonstration was given as a half-hour presentation in a theatre which was behind a stand in the uture Technology Hall, conveniently placed between the VB stand and the EBU Village. A presentation was given each hour during the five days that the exhibition was open. The theatre seated twenty people, and most sessions were full, so about 800 people saw the demonstration. The main programme source was a specially-made demonstration production, partly in 625-line widescreen format and partly in HTV; it used the device of a magician doing conjuring tricks to make some of the points and to link the presentation together. t included a number of HTV programme extracts from various sources. Several high-quality wide-screen 625-line tapes, and a live wide-screen 625-line camera in the reception area of the stand were also used. The commentary came partly from the demonstration programme and partly from a live presenter. The two projects made presentations which were linked by the common demonstration programme. Standard definition programme material was displayed on four widescreen monitors, and HTV programme material was displayed with a projector on a large screen. We had intended to show all 46

625-line material up-converted on the projector screen as well as on the monitors, but an unexplained fault made it difficult to synchronize the up-converter in some configurations. A caption monitor gave information about what was being displayed; this monitor could also be used to show information about reception conditions from small cameras looking at displays on the measurement equipment. 2.2.1. dttb demonstration or the dttb demonstration, the MPEG-2 transport stream was coded and modulated and then transmitted by a microwave link to a transmitter across the lake at Thollon (see the photograph in ig. 6). rom Thollon, the signal was broadcast on UH channel 49 (698 MHz). The signal from Thollon could be received by a rotatable antenna on the roof of the Centre des Congrès, either directly from Thollon or via a rebroadcast transmitter on the same frequency at Clarens, just west of Montreux. The signal picked up at Clarens was transposed to 369 MHz in order to feed the Montreux cable TV network. The dttb demonstration was presented first. t used the demonstration tape to point out the advantages of digital broadcasting using MPEG-2 to achieve interoperability between different media, with all signals being received via a common decoder, and flexibility for operators to choose between quantity and quality of programmes in a single channel.t described the spectral efficiency achieved with digital terrestrial broadcasting by single-frequency networks, use of interleaved ( taboo ) channels, and the transmission of four standard-definition programmes in a single channel. This was demonstrated by displaying the four programmes on the monitors and fading up the sound from each of the four channels in turn. The concept of a single frequency network was demonstrated by displaying the impulse response of the channel, as derived by the COM demodulator, on the caption monitor. When the antenna was pointing directly at Thollon, the impulse response appeared as a single spike. As the antenna was turned towards Clarens, a second spike appeared, 1.5 s later, growing in amplitude until it was greater than the signal from Thollon (see ig. 7). Reception could thus be demonstrated with a delayed signal as great as the wanted signal. n a PAL channel simulation, the decoder lost lock when the delayed signal was 8 db down. Next, reception via a small gap-filler transmitter (100 mw) in the exhibition building and a nondirectional portable antenna was demonstrated. Provided the antenna was not moved too quickly, perfect reception could be obtained in most positions. When the antenna was unplugged, the pictures froze and the sound failed; when it was plugged in again, reception was perfect after a brief resynchronization period. Reception of the COM signal over the Montreux cable network was then demonstrated. inally, the MPEG-2 codecs and multiplexer were reconfigured to demonstrate transmission of a single HTV programme in the terrestrial chan- MPEG-2 source coding HTV component: STV component: 5-channel level- audio Stereo MPEG audio Satellite transmission H-SAT characteristics 39 Mbit/s 3.9 Mbit/s 384 kbit/s 192 kbit/s Ka-band (S-1 Kopernikus) Uplink: 29.58 GHz ownlink: 19.78 GHz 2-layer time-multiplexed graceful degradation modem 27 Msymbol/s in 36 MHz bandwidth QPSK modulation (during T/6) nstantaneous bit-rate: 54 Mbit/s Turbo 3 coding with 1/2 rate Useful instantaneous bit-rate before coding: 27 Mbit/s 8 PSK modulation (during 5T/6) nstantaneous bit-rate: 81 Mbit/s 2/3-rate Trellis coding with concatenated Reed-Solomon Useful instantaneous bit-rate before coding: 54 Mbit/s Cable transmission Modulation: 64-QAM Channel width 8 MHz Roll-off 7.5 % Symbol rate of 7.5 Msymbol/s (45 Mbit/s) Convolutional interleaving Reed-Solomon (204,188,8) channel coding MPEG-2 transmultiplexer at the cable head-end igure 5 Technical characteristics of the H-SAT system used at Montreux. Packet filtering: removal of STV and stereo audio components P (Packet ) translation Output bit-rate adaptation Programme Clock Reference (PCR) jitter management 47

igure 6 (top) T microwave link from the terrace of the Centre des Congrès, Montreux, to the terrestrial transmitter at Thollon. igure 7 (bottom) mpulse response of the terrestrial channel showing the signals from Thollon (left) and Clarens at equal amplitude. nel, using a short segment of the demonstration programme shot in HTV. 2.2.2. H-SAT demonstration The H-SAT demonstration showed very highquality HTV, transmitted via a satellite channel in the 20-GHz band, and included the graceful degradation described above. The signal was uplinked at 30 GHz from a ground station on the lakeside outside the Centre des Congrès and received by a TV receive-only (TVRO) prototype antenna developed for this demonstration. The demonstration started with some short extracts to illustrate the very high picture quality and the five-channel surround sound. Then a heavy rainfall event was simulated by adding noise to the received signal, reducing the carrier-to-noise ratio (CNR) from a nominal value of about 15 db. The CNR and the constellation diagram (8PSK / QPSK) at the input to the demodulator were shown on the caption monitor. Between a CNR of 12 and 11 db, HTV reception failed and the HTV picture was replaced immediately by an up-converted version of the fallback STV signal. The CNR could be further reduced by more than 8 db before the fallback signal failed. As the CNR was increased again, HTV reception resumed at a CNR of about 13 db. uring one of the demonstrations, a real heavy rainfall event occurred and caused graceful degradation to occur. However, this created a certain amount of confusion, as the presenter was not aware of the reason for the loss of the HTV component! The S fallback component is not needed when the service is relayed on a cable TV system, so it is removed in a transmultiplexing operation as described above. The full high quality of the satellite HTV signal is then available to cable subscribers. To demonstrate this process, the satellite HTV signal was displayed on the projector with the S fallback signal on a 625-line widescreen monitor. When reception was switched to the cable demodulator, the S component froze, indicating that it was no longer being received, and the constellation diagram of the 64-QAM cable modem was displayed. This configuration was used while the demonstration concluded with the magician on the tape sawing his assistant in half (shown on two TV monitors side by side), and a finale from the opening of the Lillehammer Winter Olympics. 3. Conclusions Unlike the magician on the tape, the engineers who gave the demonstration were not playing tricks. The whole demonstration was given live, including reconfigurations of the MPEG-2 codecs, multiplexers and transmission chains. uring the week preceding the exhibition, the onsite integration of the prototype equipments into the source-to-display transmission chains was not without its difficulties (the hardware included 15 equipment racks, over 20 monitors, five digital tape recorders, 5 km of video cable...). Of course, there were the inevitable occasional failures during some of the presentations, particularly on the first day. However, the equipment worked well, and all the presentations were convincing. n showing (i) four STV programmes or one HTV programme, MPEG-2-coded in a terrestrial channel, (ii) a very high quality MPEG-2 HTV programme in a satellite channel in the 20 GHz band and (iii) both terrestrial and satellite signals relayed over the Montreux cable system, we 48

believe we have shown the future of television broadcasting in Europe. Acknowledgements The planning, setting up, and presentation of these demonstrations involved a team of about fifty engineers from about a dozen organizations around Europe, including the EBU which took charge of the building of the stand and all relations with the Montreux Symposium organization. n addition, several organizations kindly loaned equipment for the demonstrations. We are grateful to all of them: without their efforts and assistance, these demonstrations would have been impossible. H-SAT and dttb are supported by the Commission of the European Communities through the ramework programme. The authors would like to thank the BBC and Alcatel Espace for permission to publish this article. Bibliography [1] Marti et al.:european activities on digital television broadcasting: from company to cooperative projects EBU Technical Review, No. 256 (Summer 1993) pp 20-29. [2] osch, Ch.: nteroperability of digital HTV satellite broadcasting (21.4-22 GHz) with the existing and future media infrastructure: status of the H-SAT project EBU Technical Review, No. 260 (Summer 1994) pp 51-63. [3] Combarel, L. and Oliphant, A.: The first complete demonstration of digital television broadcasting: the joint demonstration of RACE projects H-SAT and dttb Montreux 1995 Cable,Satellite and Terrestrial Symposium Record. [4] Pirat, P., Bensberg, G. and Joanblanq, C.: The development of the first dttb system demonstrator BC 94. [5] e Bot, et al: An overview of the modulation and channel coding schemes developed for digital terrestrial broadcasting with the dttb project BC 94. [6] Combarel, L.and Lavan, E.: H-SAT: HTV Broadcasting over Ka-band Satellite, Cable and MMS BC 94. [7] Palicot J. and Veillard J.: Possible channel coding and modulation system for the satellite broadcasting of a high-definition televison signal mage Communication, Vol. 5, 1993, pp 463-471 After studying at Cambridge University, Andrew Oliphant joined BBC Research epartment in 1972 and first worked on the transmission and reception of teletext. Later, he worked on the digital processing of video signals in telecine systems, and on improvements to PAL which led to work on enhanced video coding systems and on the multiplexing of digital and analogue signals for satellite broadcasting. rom 1987 to 1984, Mr Oliphant worked on optical routeing of television signals, and was manager of two RACE projects that developed a wavelength- and time-multiplexed routeing system. He then moved to dttb to lead the demonstration module. Andrew Oliphant represented the BBC on EBU Specialist Group V1-V, the group that carried out the preliminary work which led to TU-R Recommendation BT.601. He also worked within EBU groups V1-EVSS, V4 and T3, and within the CMTT (now TU SG9). Laurent Combarel received his Engineering iploma in 1985 and started his career with Telesystems. n this company, he worked under contract to rance Telecom on the telecommunication infrastructure needed for computer data exchange. Since joining Alcatel Espace, Mr Combarel has been involved in defining the telecommunication networks needed for the Hermès spacecraft, and in the implementation of telemetry/telecommand systems for the ground stations in the satellite networks of the Centre national d études spatiales (CNES). At present, Laurent Combarel is working in Alcatel s department for new telecommunication services via satellite. n particular, he is leading the H-SAT Project. 49