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The simultaneous PAL transmission of all TV-picture elements and the multiplexed transmission of the TV picture elements with D2-MAC.
Simulated MAC signal. From left to right: digital data, chrominance and luminance
Multiplexed Analogue Components (MAC) was a satellite television transmission standard, originally proposed for use on a Europe-wide terrestrial HDTV system, although it was never used terrestrially.
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MAC transmits luminance and chrominance data separately in time rather than separately in frequency (as other analog television formats do, such as composite video).
Audio and Scrambling (selective access)
A number of broadcasting variants of the MAC standard exist.
S-MAC (Studio MAC): Used mostly in North America.
Mathematical
Broadcast Engineering
Broadcast engineering
Although the MAC technique is capable of superior video quality, (similar to the improvement of component video over composite in a DVD player), its major drawback was that this quality was only ever realized when the video signals being transmitted remained in component form from source to transmitter. If at any stage the video had to be handled in composite form, the necessary encoding/decoding processes would severely degrade the picture quality.
Since the vast majority of TV stations and similar installations were only wired for composite video, the fitting of a MAC transmitter at the end of the chain had the effect of degrading the transmitted image quality, rather than improving it.
For this and other technical reasons, MAC systems never really caught on with broadcasters. MAC transmission technology was made obsolete by the radically new digital systems (like DVB-T and ATSC) in the late 1990s.
Although MAC transmission systems are still used, the technology is obsolete. It is expected that MAC will cease to be used for TV transmission by 2012.
Web links:
TV transmission systems:
| Broadcast video formats | |
|---|---|
| Analog broadcast | 525 lines: NTSC • NTSC-J • PAL-M
625 lines: PAL • PAL-N • PALplus • SECAM Defunct systems: Pre-1940 • 405 lines • 819 lines • Baird-Nipkow • MAC • MUSE Multichannel audio: BTSC (MTS) • NICAM-728 • Zweiton (A2, IGR) • EIAJ Hidden signals: Captioning • Teletext • CGMS-A • GCR • PDC • VBI • VEIL • VITC • WSS • XDS |
| Digital broadcast | Interlaced: SDTV (480i, 576i) • HDTV (1080i)
Progressive: LDTV (240p, 288p, 1seg) • EDTV (480p, 576p) • HDTV (720p, 1080p) Digital TV standards (MPEG-2):ATSC, DVB, ISDB, DMB-T/H Digital TV standards (MPEG-4 AVC):DMB-T/H,DVB,SBTVD,ISDB (1seg) Multichannel audio: AC3 (5.1) • Musicam • PCM • LPCM • AAC Hidden signals: Captioning • Teletext • (CPCM/Broadcast flag) • AFD • EPG |
| Digital Cinema | UHDV (2540p, 4320p) • DCI |
| Technical issues | 14:9 • MPEG transport • Reverse Standards Conversion • Standards conversion • Video processing • VOD • HDTV blur |
| High-definition (HD) | |
|---|---|
| Concepts | High-definition video • High-definition television • High-definition audio |
| Analog broadcast (defunct) | SECAM 819 lines • HD MAC • MUSE |
| Digital broadcast | ATSC, DVB, ISDB (SBTVD), DMB-T/H |
| Audio: | Dolby Digital (5.1) • Musicam • PCM • LPCM • DXD • DSD • AAC |
| Filming and storage | HDV • DCI |
| pre-recorded media and compression | Blu-ray Disc • HD DVD • HD VMD • D-VHS • Super Audio CD • DVD Audio • MPEG-2 • H.264 • VC-1 |
| Connectors | Component • HDMI • DVI • DisplayPort • UDI |
| Deployments | List of digital television deployments by country |
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