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elements in a CCD (chip) camera. so that the electronic system has time to stabilize. playbacks or transfers electronically stable. A TBC helps to maintain picture stability even in dubbing-up Used in all but the 1-inch VTRs. understand if you think of it in the same terms as a record and a phonograph. Analog systems record the continually fluctuating video signal that is created and processed by a video source (camera) on videotape. by magnetizing the iron oxide coating on the videotape. During playback, the recorded video and audio signals are converted again by the television set into television information is many times greater for video than for audio recording. systems can be divided roughly into three subsections: analog and digital; composite (Y/C), and component; and tape formats. blue video signals throughout the entire recording process. Each of the three signals remains separate even when laid down on the videotape. The component system requires three wires to transport a video signal. system requires three wires to handle the video signal that is incompatible with the NTSC system. into a single NTSC composite signal before it can be broadcast. as an identical, continually fluctuating signal from the videotape. office computer. Digital-video systems convert the analog video signals by sampling (selecting parts of) the scanned image. It then translates the scanned image into millions of independent, fixed, values called pixels. A pixel is the smallest single picture element from which images are constructed. Each pixel has its own color (hue and saturation) and luminance values. These values are expressed as binary numbers (series of zeros and ones). The binary numbers are then stored on, and retrieved from, videotape or other storage mediums, such as large-capacity disks. composite video signal means that the luminance information ("Y" signal), chrominance information ("C" signal), and the sync information are combined into a single signal (Y+C+sync). Standard television information is designed to operate with composite video signals. Only one wire is required to transport a composite video signal. This composite signal is usually called NTSC, because the electronic specifications for a composite video signal were adopted by the National Television Standards Committee. luminance information. This interference becomes more noticeable through each videotape generation. Basic Photography Course |
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