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Television
The transmission and reproduction of moving pictures and associated sound by electronic means; developed in the late 19th-c and early 20th-c, with the first pictures presented by Baird in 1926. The image of a scene in a TV camera using a vidicon tube is analyzed by scanning along a series of horizontal lines, the variations of brightness along each line being converted into a train of electrical signals for transmission or recording.
Cameras using solid-state sensors such as charge-coupled device arrays read out the image information by sequential interrogation of each pixel. At the receiver the picture is reconstituted on the fluorescent screen of a cathode-ray tube by an electron beam scanning a precisely similar pattern, the brightness of each point depending on the beam intensity controlled by the incoming signal.
The number of scanning lines and the picture frequency vary in different systems, the American standard having 525 lines with 30 pictures per second (pps) and the European 625 lines at 25 pps. In both cases one complete picture, or frame, is scanned in two sets of alternate lines, termed fields,which are interlaced to reduce flicker in the receiver image. As scanning returns from the end of one line to the start of the next, there is a brief period without picture information, horizontal blanking; similarly after each completed field there is the vertical interval, field blanking, while scanning returns from bottom to top.
Synchronizing pulses at precise time intervals are inserted in these periods to ensure correct scanning in the receiver. For terrestrial broadcasting the complete vision signal modulates a radio wave in one of the ultra-high-frequency (UHF) bands between 470 and 890 mHz as a carrier, while the corresponding sound (audio) signal has its own carrier at a slightly higher frequency. High-definition TV systems with more than 1000 scanning lines will be transmitted via satellite using the super-high-frequency (SHF) band, 11.7 to 12.5 gHz.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Television"

