Infobase: About High Definition Video (Part 1)
High definition is more than just a larger flat screen –
it’s a complete change in the way we record, edit and share
our video clips using HD camcorders. But what, exactly, is
this thing called High Definition and how does it influence
the way we shoot our movie projects?
It seems only a short while ago that we regarded high
definition as being the domain of the professional camera
operator, yet thanks to the proliferation of so-called “HD
Ready” Plasma and LCD television displays in the shops the
whole market has changed to the point where people are
rapidly turning their backs on standard definition (SD) in
favour of the largest HD displays they can lay their hands
on. But proper HD is more than just a TV or DVD picture being
displayed on an impressively large flat screen.
What influences people’s buying choices for TV displays has a
natural knock-on effect for camcorders, too; somehow, all
those old analogue and even digital video clips don’t look so
good on that super new TV screen – even if they’ve been
recorded digitally and in widescreen. Today’s camcorder user
wants High Definition, and who can blame them? But what,
exactly, is High Definition – and how is this likely to
influence the type of camcorder we buy?
Video by definition
When people see “HD Ready” stickers on those nice big flat
displays in the shops do they actually know what it all
means? In order to see just how radically different is HD or
SD (standard definition) let’s first analyse the two. The TV
system we’ve grown up with since the medium’s very beginnings
is regarded as being SD. It’s only since the emergence of HD
that it’s had that moniker, but we now regard SD as being the
traditional format TV picture – which has a picture aspect
ratio of 4:3 (horizontal:vertical).
In most of Europe, our TV system uses a colour system call
PAL (Phase Alternating Line) which describes TV picture
sequences as having 25 frames per second, each made up of 625
lines. However, each picture is scanned in two passes – odd
and even lines separately - thus involving 50 scans per
second (50 cycles per second = 50 Hz). Of the 625 scanning
lines, only 576 lines are of any use (the rest being
“redundant”), and when we’re handling SD video in the digital
domain the picture sequence is converted into pixels
measuring 720 x 576 pixels per image.
In the USA, Japan and other parts of the world where the NTSC
(rather than PAL) system is used, a standard TV picture is
scanned by 525 interlaced lines – 525i rather than PAL’s
625i. Taking into account redundancy, the standard definition
4:3 NTSC digital video frame is constructed using 720 x 480
pixels.
Defining High Definition
High definition is a completely different beast to SD for two
reasons. The first is that it is based upon a specification
that employs a far greater number of scanning lines, and
secondly because it’s a much wider picture by default. The
full specification HD image is defined as 1920 horizontal
pixels by 1080 vertical pixels (scanning lines). However,
there are two types of HD – one of which uses a lesser 720
vertical lines. So which is best?
Well, it depends on how the picture is constructed. When the
benchmark specification for HD was laid down, the vast
majority of us were still using CRT (Cathode Ray Tube) TV
sets which relied upon interlaced frame scanning. However,
the increased use of Plasma and now LCD flat-screen displays
is such that interlaced sequences can look jittery and
unpleasant when viewed on flat displays, and tests have show
that it’s better to combine each of the two alternate
“fields” into one and a single solid frame in one pass. We
call this a “progressive” frame (as in 720p, 1080p, etc).
The majority of current high definition camcorders shoot
interlaced frames made up of 1080 lines – denoted as 1080i.
Of these, an increasing number are employing the full 1920
horizontal pixels, though many use a cheat by scanning 1440
pixels (as do many professional TV cameras) and then scaling
up using what’s known as the Pixel-Shift Technique (see
“Shifty Pixels”). Whilst lots of consumers are starting to
demand 1080p camcorders, it’s possible that audiences will
prefer 720p sequences if recent research in Austria is
anything to go by; according to tests by Hans Hoffman –
Senior Engineer with the European Broadcasting Union – 720p
HD sequences looked better than 1080i/50Hz and even
1080p/50Hz at all levels of compression, so perhaps the holy
grail that is 1080p is superfluous.
Shifty Pixels
Some recent HD camcorders, such as JVC’s GZ-HD7 hard-disc
recording HD camcorder and Panasonic’s latest HDC-SD5 and SX5
AVCHD models, achieve the full 1920 x 1080i specification by
a nifty little technique called “Pixel Shift”. Whilst it can
be considered to be a bit of a cheat, it’s not new – having
been around for 20 years or so, and which has been employed
by Canon on its 3CCD XL, XM and XH range models. But what is
it?
Pixel shift is a technique that was developed by Panasonic
and is used also by Canon, Sony and JVC to effectively
increase the luminance (brightness / saturation) and overall
resolution of the images produced by a camcorder’s CCDs that
originate a lesser number of pixels than required by high
definition. What it effectively does is to shift the green
CCD’s output diagonally upwards (or sometimes just sideways)
by one half a pixel; this – combined by some other complex
maths – effectively increases to 1920 x 1080 the true CCD
output of, for instance, Panasonic’s HDC-SD5 from 1440 x
1080i. This improvement in luminance and resolution is most
noticeable in images that don’t contain fully saturated
colour, such as red. Even some camcorders that record HD to
tape (eg: HDV) rely on Pixel Shift despite the fact that the
image is then reduced to 1440 horizontal pixels prior to
recording.
Relative sizes - How Standard Definition compares to High
Definition
It's only when you compare like-for-like video frames that
you begin to appreciate the substantial differences between
standard definition and high definition television images.
Even standard definition widescreen images look small when
compared at exactly the same scale on a pixel-for-pixel basis
as their true high definition counterparts. Here’s a standard
definition picture shot in 4:3 aspect ratio and conforming to
the PAL specification of 720 x 576 pixels:
The wider 16:9 aspect ratio afforded by some SD cameras can
produce 1024 x 576 pixel images (usually by squeezing the
optical image before it hits the CCD), but at least it
provides us with increased creative potential where
composition is concerned:
It’s when you consider the true HD image at 1920 x 1080
pixels that you begin to see how advantageous it is to shoot
in HD. The result is greatly improved picture clarity on
similar-sized HDTV capable displays:
Please note that for ease of presentation on this page, the
actual-size images (as denoted in pixels in each case) have
been reduced by a common factor of 35%. Please be aware that
the SD picture measurements relate to images produced using
PAL equipment. In areas where NTSC is used (eg: USA, Canada,
Japan, etc) the vertical resolution will be 480 pixels rather
than the 576 pixels referred to above.
In the second part of this feature on HD we consider the
practical considerations of choosing your first HD camcorder
and the means of then connecting it to a suitable television
display.
See: High Definition Part
2
Words: Colin Barrett, SimplyDV. Aspect ratio pictures
(above): Brian Thomas. Used by kind permission. No
unauthorised reproduction or distribution. Copyright 2002,
2005, 2008.
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