Seminar Report On DTH
Seminar Report On DTH
ABSTRACT
DTH is a new technology and it has matured to its full
potential in other parts of the world. There are many
application has been found everyday for exploitation of
benefits of DTH
The word ‘DTH’ is synonymous with transmission of digital
video channel to home subscriber’s using a small dish
antenna. The DTH utilizes a technology which enables a home
to receive high speed internet broadband access data
communication, voice over internet protocol (IP) telephony
and much more using an open standard Digital Video
Broadcasting (DVB) technology. The video channels are
received with a suitable set top box. Capable of demodulating
Motion Picture Engineering Group (MPEG-2) standard videos. It
is for the return channel required for other services such as
voice over internet protocol and broadband access data
communications, that a return channel is also required for the
home terminal. The return channel via the satellite is called
RCS and is an open standard.
Hardware compatible with DVB-RCS technology are readily
available in the market in both Ku-band and C-band. DVB-RCS
is an international open standard for multimedia satellite
network where the return data rates in access of 2 Mbps are
possible using low cost user terminals. The forward ink is
usually at 40 Mbps.
Today, most satellite TV customers in developed television
markets get their programming through a direct broadcast
satellite (DBS) provider, such as DISH TV or DTH platform. The
provider selects programs and broadcasts them to subscribers as
a set package. Basically, the provider’s goal is to bring dozens or
even hundreds of channels to the customer’s television in a form
that approximates the competition from Cable TV. Unlike earlier
programming, the provider’s broadcast is completely digital,
which means it has high picture and stereo sound quality. Early
satellite television was broadcast in C-band - radio in the 3.4-
gigahertz (GHz) to 7-GHz frequency range. Digital broadcast
satellite transmits programming in the Ku frequency range (10
GHz to 14 GHz). There are five major components involved in a
direct to home (DTH) satellite
The DTH
DTH stands for Direct-To-Home television. DTH is defined as the
reception of satellite programmes with a personal dish in an
individual home.
DTH does away with the need for the local cable operator and
puts the broadcaster directly in touch with the consumer. Only
cable operators can receive satellite programmes and they then
distribute them to individual homes.
Working of DTH
A DTH network consists of a broadcasting centre, satellites,
encoders, multiplexers, modulators and DTH receivers.
A DTH service provider has to lease Ku-band transponders from
the satellite. The encoder converts the audio, video and data
signals into the digital format and the multiplexer mixes these
signals. At the user end, there will be a small dish antenna and
set-top boxes to decode and view numerous channels. On the
user's end, receiving dishes can be as small as 45 cm in
diameter.
DTH is an encrypted transmission that travels to the consumer
directly through a satellite. DTH transmission is received
directly by the consumer at his end through the small dish
antenna. A settop box, unlike the regular cable connection,
decodes the encrypted transmission.
HOW DOES DTH REALLY DIFFER FROM CABLE TV
The way DTH reaches a consumer's home is different from the
way cable TV does. In DTH, TV channels would be transmitted
from the satellite to a small dish antenna mounted on the window
or rooftop of the subscriber's home. So the broadcaster directly
connects to the user. The middlemen like local cable operators
are not there in the picture.
DTH can also reach the remotest of areas since it does away with
the intermediate step of a cable operator and the wires (cables)
that come from the cable operator to your house. As we explained
above, in DTH signals directly come from the satellite to your DTH
dish.
Also, with DTH, a user can scan nearly 700 channels!
Does one need to put two dish antennae and pay
double
Subscription per month if one has two TVs
For multiple connections in the same premises, one can use the
same connection. However, every television set will need to have
an individual STB.
Also, DTH is a national service and the STBs enable a viewer to
change service providers without changing the STB, even if one
moves from one city to another.
DD Direct:
DD Direct is launched by Doordarshan. It operates from NSS-6
Satellite and gives 33 free to air channels and 13 radio channels.
The transmission covers most of the India. The cost of the Dish,
LNBC and Set top box is around Rs. 2500/-. With this setup only
free to air channels are visible.
Dish TV:
Dish TV is launched by Essel Group. The Dish TV has different set
top box with Smart card facility to decode paid channels. The cost
of the unit is around Rs. 4000/-. So user can watch paid as well as
free channels and radio programs. The user has to pay monthly
rental for paid channels. The entire 'Zee Network' channels are
available on Dish TV. Dish TV Transmission is also from NSS-6
Satellite.
NSS 6
NSS 6, Ku-band satellite with Ka band uplink capabilities, will
provide fully interactive access to high speed internet and other
multimedia communications. Additionally, it will provide direct to
home broadcasting services a well AS THE full compliment of
traditional enterprise telecommunications services across the
large coverage area stretching from the eastern Mediterranean
and southern Africa to Australia, Japan and Korea.
Access Cable Operators (ACOs) or your local cable guy who
actually lays the wires to your house. The local cable operators or
the ACOs then allegedly underreport the number of subscribers
they have bagged because they have to pay the MSOs something
like Rs 30-45 per household.
Showing a lesser number of households benefits ACOs. With no
way to actually cross check, the MSOs and the broadcasters lose
a lot. Broadcasters do not earn much in subscription fees and are
mostly dependent on advertisement revenue to cover their costs,
which is not sustainable and does not offer high growth in
revenues for broadcasters.
The way out of this is to use a set-top box so that it will be clear
how many households are actually using cable or going for DTH
where broadcasters directly connect to consumers and can
actually grow revenues with a growth in the subscriber base.
THE COMPONENTS
Programming sources are simply the channels that provide
programming for broadcast. The provider doesn't create original
programming itself; it pays other companies (HBO, for example,
or ESPN) for the right to broadcast their content via satellite. In
this way, the provider is kind of like a broker between you and the
actual programming sources. (Cable television companies work
on the same principle.)
The broadcast center is the central hub of the system. At the
broadcast center, the television provider receives signals from
various programming sources and beams a broadcast signal to
satellites in geostationary orbit.
The satellites receive the signals from the broadcast station and
rebroadcast them to the ground.
The viewer's dish picks up the signal from the satellite (or
multiple satellites in the same part of the sky) and passes it on to
the receiver in the viewer's house.
The receiver processes the signal and passes it on to a standard
television.
SATELLITE
Geostationary satellites play an important role for DTH systems.
WHAT IS GEO STATIONARY SATELLITE
Geostationary satellites are positioned at an exact height
above the earth (about 36000 Km).
At this height they rotate around the earth at the same
speed as the earth
rotates around its axis, so in effect remaining stationary
above a point on
the earth (normally directly overhead the equator).
As they remain stationary they are ideal for use as
communications satellites and also for remote imaging as
they can repeatedly scan the same points on the earth
beneath them.
Polar Orbiting satellites by comparison have a much lower
orbit, moving around the earth fairly rapidly, and scanning
different areas of the earth at relatively infrequent periods.
Motion of Geostationary Satellite around EARTH
it is clear that geostationary satellite has
circular orbit.
In each orbit the time period remains same.
Orbital plane is same as equator.
Above 3 condition are necessary for a satellite to be a
geostationary
satellite.
Otherwise it will become geo synchronous satellite, which
appears oscillating to an observer on the earth at fix location
in sky.
Focusing of a particular position on earth
shows how geostationary satellite focuses a
part of earth.
We know that earth rotates on its axis.
Each such rotation has time period 24 hours.
Fig. explains how the same part of earth remains
always in the focus of geostationary satellite.
Geostationary satellite and earth both rotate in same
direction with same speed.
Derivation of radius of orbit
Above is mathematical calculation of radius of
geostationary satellite.
• Fc- centrifugal force.
• Fg centripetal force.
• R radius of orbit.
Receiver which point to a geostationary satellite
receiving antenna of DTH is shown located at
the top of a house.
Position of receivers at different location of earth.
Satellite again broadcasts them to subscribers as a set
package. Basically, the provider’s goal is to bring
dozens or even hundreds of channels to the customer’s
television.
COMPRESSION
The two major providers in the United States use the MPEG-2
compressed video format -- the same format used to store movies
on DVDs. With MPEG-2 compression, the provider can reduce the
270- Mbps stream to about 5 or 10 Mbps (depending on the type
of programming). This is the crucial step that has made DBS
service a success. With digital compression, a typical satellite can
transmit about 200 channels. Without digital compression, it can
transmit about 30 channels.
At the broadcast center, the high-quality digital stream of video
goes through an MPEG-2 encoder, which converts the
programming to MPEG-2 video of the correct size and format for
the satellite receiver in your house.
The MPEG encoder analyzes each frame and decides how to
encode it. The encoder eliminates redundant or irrelevant data,
and extrapolates information from other frames to reduce the
overall size of the file. Each frame can be encoded in one of three
ways:
• As an intraframe - An intraframe contains the complete
image data for that frame. This method of encoding
provides the least compression.
• As a predicted frame - A predicted frame contains just
enough information to tell the satellite.
• Receiver how to display the frame based on the most
recently displayed intra frame or predicted frame. This
means that the frame contains only the data that relates to
how the picture has changed from the previous frame.
• As a bidirectional frame - To display a bidirectional frame,
the receiver must have the information from the
surrounding intraframe or predicted frames. Using data from
the closest surrounding frames, the receiver interpolates
the position and color of each pixel.
This process occasionally produces "artifacts" -- little glitches in
the video image -- but for the most part, it creates a clear, vivid
picture.
The rate of compression depends on the nature of the
programming. If the encoder is converting a newscast, it can use
a lot more predicted frames because most of the scene stays the
same from one frame to the next. In other sorts of programming,
such as action movies and music videos, things change very
quickly from one frame to the next, so the encoder has to create
more intraframes. As a result, something like a newscast
generally compresses to a much smaller size than something like
an action movie.
RECEIVE TERMINALS
The receive terminals are basically for the reception of the signals
being beamed from the transmission station. The terminal
consists of the following:
• receive type solid offset antenna
• LNB feed system
• Interface cables &
• Set top box
The terminal can be placed outside the window of a high rise
building, on the ground or a roof mount. The terminals can be
used as per the contents being beam by the transmission
stations.
Parabolic reflector
The parabolic reflector receives externally generated noise along
with the desired signal. When the satellite dish tilts up towards
the "cold" sky, the antenna noise temperature is at its lowest
level. If the antenna must tilt downward to receive a low-elevation
satellite, however, the antenna's noise temperature will increase
dramatically because it is now able to intercept the "hot" noise
temperature of the Earth (Figure 5-3). The actual amount of noise
increase in this case is a function of antenna f/D ratio and
diameter. Minimum antenna elevation angles of 5 degrees, for Cband,
and 10 degrees, for Ku-band, above the site location's
horizon usually are recommended.
Universal LNB
A wide band product called a "universal" Ku-band LNB is available that can
switch electronically between the 10.7-11.7 and 11.7-12.75 GHz frequency
spectra
to provide complete coverage of the entire Ku-band frequency range .The
receiver or IRD sends a switching voltage (13 or 17 volts DC) to the LNB that
automatically changes the LNB input frequency range to the desired
frequency
spectrum (10.70-11.75 GHz or 11.7-12.75 GHz). Keep in mind, however, that
any
universal LNB with an IF output frequency range of 950-2,050 MHz can only
be
used effectively with a receiver or IRD that also has a comparable IF input
frequency range.
LNB Specifications:
I/P Range 1O.7GHz to 12.75GHz
Local Oscillator 9.75GHz or 10.6GHz
Noise Figure 0.5dB
Noise Temperature 35 Kelvin @ 290 degree
Gain 55dB 4
LNB
the set top box accepts the entire down
converted band and separates out the individual transponder
frequency. Then signals are first converted to fixed IF and then
QPSK demodulated. The bandwidth of QPSK signals is 27.5 MHz as
the bit rate is 27.5 Mb/s. It is observed that 11 digital channels
are multiplexed in 27.5 MHz bandwidth. The power supply for
LNB, polarization selection signals as well as LO setting signals
are send by the set top box itself by using the same cable
between the LNB and set top box.
After the QPSK demodulation, the digital bit stream obtained
contains several multiplexed channels as well as error control
bits. The bit stream is processed to correct and detect errors, deinterleaved,
and decrypted. A digital demultiplexer then extracts
the bits for wanted channel, and sends them to MPEG decoder,
and finally generates analog Audio and Video signals with DIA
converters to drive TV set.
The paid channels are encrypted, and a smart card having the
correct key for decryption is required to view the paid channels.
The key is provided by the paying monthly rent by the user.
DTH APPLICATIONS
a)To view pay & free-to-air TV channels of various DTH platform
on your home TV.
b) Doordarshan free-to-air services providing 40 TV channels with
no subscription fees is an attractive preposition to people in
urban and rural areas. These
channels comprises of DD channels and popular channels of news
, sports , information , entertainment etc.
c) One can scan the entire globe with a motorized dish using a CI
set top box with CAM modules and watch TV channels of several
DTH platforms visible to the
dish terminals.
d) A number has started IP broadcast with return channel on PSTN
line and this would be for education and other application.
DTH-BENEFITS
Benefits of DTH extends to all sections of the society since DTH
has a reach in all areas whether it is remote or urban , it provides
equal benefits to everyone. Benefits of DTH are listed below:
• Cost effective communication, information and entertainment to
all .
• Small size terminals can provide up to 4000 TV channels and
2000 radio channels through a click of a button and thus brings
world’s at least information, news, entertainment to your home .
• DTH services bypasses mediators and thus content provider
comes with customer directly.
• DTH services are transparent providing digital quality video,
audio, radio, and IP to all at equal prices and other benefits with
reliability.
CONCLUSION
DTH projects in India are jus DTH projects in India are just a beginning and
we are taking the
advantage of DTH revolution. Direct to home connects urban,
rural and remote areas of the country and provides desire
information communication, education and entertainment at the
click of a button.
1. Broadband noise will have negligible effect on GMRT
Observations, as the minimum separation distance is 90
meters with the assumption that there is no DTH system in 100
meter circle from any of the GMRT antennas. Care must be
taken for arm antennas.
2. Narrow band noise can cause RFI, in spectral line observations
below 400MHz, if located at about 2 km from a GMRT antenna.
Further Work
1. It is useful to be able to control LNB without set top box so as
to understand the exact spectrum at LNB o/p. Effort is to be put
to make the circuit on page 18 (or some other approach) work.
2. Effect of Narrow band noise on GMRT must be studied in detail.
Towards this, a DTH Receiver needs to be installed on an
evaluation basis at the GMRT Guest Housel Recreation Room
and test observations in spectral line mode perfonned with
different "poorly made" coaxial cables to link the LNB and STB.
Careful check for lines seen in nearby antennas like C3, C4,
and C9 etc in 235 and 325 MHz bands would help in getting a
clearer picture regarding the severity of the problem/s in a
controlled manner.
3. Finally, to restrict possible RFI, one can design a Hair Pin Filter
with provision of passing DC and 22 KHz tone which can be
added between the LNB and set top box. This will only allow
the required satellite signals and attenuate noise in the GMRT
band.