SMPTE EG 2046-3-2010 Safe Areas for Television《电视安全区域》.pdf
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1、 Copyright 2010 by THE SOCIETY OF MOTION PICTURE AND TELEVISION ENGINEERS 3 Barker Avenue., White Plains, NY 10601 (914) 761-1100 Approved February 23, 2010 Table of Contents Page Foreword . 2 Intellectual Property 2 1 Scope . 3 2 Conformance Notation . 3 3 Normatice References . 3 4 History of Tele
2、vision Safe Areas 3 5 The New Specifications 5 6 A Use Case 5 Annex A Bibliography (Informative) 6 Annex B Television Receiver Picture Area Losses . 7 Page 1 of 8 pages SMPTE EG 2046-3:2010 SMPTE ENGINEERING GUIDELINE Safe Areas for Television SMPTE EG 2046-3:2010 Page 2 of 8 pages Foreword SMPTE (t
3、he Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers) is an internationally-recognized standards developing organization. Headquartered and incorporated in the United States of America, SMPTE has members in over 80 countries on six continents. SMPTEs Engineering Documents, including Standards, Reco
4、mmended Practices, and Engineering Guidelines, are prepared by SMPTEs Technology Committees. Participation in these Committees is open to all with a bona fide interest in their work. SMPTE cooperates closely with other standards-developing organizations, including ISO, IEC and ITU. SMPTE Engineering
5、 Documents are drafted in accordance with the rules given in Part XIII of its Administrative Practices. SMPTE EG 2046-3 was prepared by Technology Committee 10E. Intellectual Property At the time of publication, no notice had been received by SMPTE claiming patent rights essential to the implementat
6、ion of this Engineering Guideline. However, attention is drawn to the possibility that some of the elements of this document may be the subject of patent rights. SMPTE shall not be held responsible for identifying any or all such patent rights. SMPTE EG 2046-3:2010 Page 3 of 8 pages 1 Scope SMPTE ha
7、s several Standards and Recommended Practices on safe areas for television. Among these are SMPTE ST 2046-1, SMPTE RP 2046-2, SMPTE RP 218, and SMPTE RP 27.3. It is the purpose of this Engineering Guideline to explain the use of these documents and the relationships among them and others, principall
8、y SMPTE ST 2016-1. A brief history of TV safe areas and their evolution is also given. 2 Conformance Notation Normative text is text that describes elements of the design that are indispensable or contains the conformance language keywords: “shall“, “should“, or “may“. Informative text is text that
9、is potentially helpful to the user, but not indispensable, and can be removed, changed, or added editorially without affecting interoperability. Informative text does not contain any conformance keywords. All text in this document is, by default, normative, except: the Introduction, any section expl
10、icitly labeled as “Informative“ or individual paragraphs that start with “Note: The keywords “shall“ and “shall not“ indicate requirements strictly to be followed in order to conform to the document and from which no deviation is permitted. The keywords, “should“ and “should not“ indicate that, amon
11、g several possibilities, one is recommended as particularly suitable, without mentioning or excluding others; or that a certain course of action is preferred but not necessarily required; or that (in the negative form) a certain possibility or course of action is deprecated but not prohibited. The k
12、eywords “may“ and “need not“ indicate courses of action permissible within the limits of the document. The keyword reserved indicates a provision that is not defined at this time, shall not be used, and may be defined in the future. The keyword forbidden indicates reserved and in addition indicates
13、that the provision will never be defined in the future. Unless otherwise specified, the order of precedence of the types of normative information in this document shall be as follows: Normative prose shall be the authoritative definition; Tables shall be next; followed by formal languages; then figu
14、res; and then any other language forms. 3 Normative References The following standards contain provisions which, through reference in this text, constitute provisions of this recommended practice. At the time of publication, the editions indicated were valid. All standards are subject to revision, a
15、nd parties to agreements based on this recommended practice are encouraged to investigate the possibility of applying the most recent edition of the standards indicated below. None. 4 History of Television Safe Areas From the early days of film and television, it has been recognized that not all of
16、the information contained in the original image frame will necessarily be presented to the viewer. In television, the principal limitation has been the use of overscan in the viewers receiver. In 1957, the SMPTE Journal included a paper entitled Television Receiver Picture Area Losses, in which the
17、author, Charles Townsend, describes research conducted at NBCs WRCA-TV in an effort to determine the extent of the broadcast image that was actually seen in viewers homes. The paper is reproduced in Annex B. Note that the safe area the author suggests is based on the assumption that all elements wit
18、hin the safe area will be viewable on at least 85% of receivers; no attempt is made to ensure viewability on 100% of receivers. SMPTE EG 2046-3:2010 Page 4 of 8 pages The safe area pattern recommended is 80% of image height and approximately 80% of image width, adjusted for the shape of the mask, wh
19、ich reflects the circular shape of the CRTs then in use. Two letters to the editor of the Journal, published in May 1958, noted prior tests conducted in 1947 by Otis Freeman, then at DuMont, which had been published in the March 1948 issue of Television magazine. Mr. Freeman obtained very similar re
20、sults. As a consequence, the following standard practice was included in the DuMont Television Networks Engineering Standards Handbook: All studio monitors shall be marked with lines to indicate full raster size and 10% margins on either side and at top and bottom. Engineering personnel will advise
21、program personnel to keep important program material within these limits. The 10% margins cited yield a safe area of 80% of picture width and 80% of picture height. In 1961, SMPTE issued SMPTE RP 8, Safe Title Area for TV Transmission, which specified this 80% width, 80% height rectangle with rounde
22、d corners as the Safe Title Area. This was followed in 1963 by SMPTE RP 13, Safe Action Area for TV Transmission, which specified a 90% width, 90% height rectangle with rounded corners as the Safe Action Area. In 1968, the two RPs were combined into a revised SMPTE RP 8. 1972 saw the publication of
23、SMPTE RP 27.3, Specifications for Safe Action and Safe Title Area Test Pattern for Television Systems, which specified a test pattern for 2 x 2 slides and 16mm and 35mm motion-picture film for television. This replaced SMPTE RP 8, maintaining the same dimensions and shapes of the safe areas. In 2002
24、, SMPTE issued SMPTE RP 218, which brought the specification forward into the digital era by specifying safe areas in terms of pixel and line counts rather than linear dimensions. The rounded corners were also eliminated, as by that time consumer CRTs had square corners. Although superseded, SMPTE R
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