1080i

From Freepedia

1080i is the shorthand name for a category of video modes. The number 1080 stands for 1080 lines of vertical resolution, while the letter i stands for interlaced or non-progressive scan. 1080i is considered to be an HDTV video mode. The term usually assumes a widescreen aspect ratio of 16:9, implying a horizontal resolution of 1920 lines and a frame resolution of 1920 x 1080 or about 2.07 million pixels. The field rate (not the frame rate) in hertz can be either implied by the context or specified after the letter i. The two field rates in common use are 50 and 60 Hz, with the former (1080i50) generally being used in traditional PAL and SECAM countries (Europe, Australia, much of Asia, Africa and South America), the latter (1080i60) in traditional NTSC countries (North America, Japan). Both variants can be transported by both major digital television formats, ATSC and DVB.

1080i is directly compatible with numerous CRT-based HDTV sets. 1080i is compatible with newer 720p- and 1080p-based televisions but must be deinterlaced first in order to be displayed on those sets.

Due to a curiosity of the NTSC format, the field rate of actual 1080i broadcasts is usually 0.1% slower than is implied. For example, a 1080i60 or "60 Hz" transmission actually displays 59.94 fields each second. Both the straight 24/30/60 and 23.976/29.97/59.94 frequencies are supported by current standards.

For a comparison between 1080i and 720p, see the 720p article.

1080i vs 1080p

The progressive-scan versions of the 1080-line resolution is known as 1080p. Current digital television broadcast systems and standards are not equipped for 1080p50/60 transmission. It is less bandwidth-intensive to broadcast a movie at 1080p24 than 1080i60, since 20% less data would be transferred. In addition, when the source material is 24 frames per second, as are most films, it would be easy to convert a 1080p24 broadcast to an NTSC 1080i60 format using a telecine process. On the other hand, most consumer televisions in the world are currently not equipped to receive or decode a 1080p signal at any frequency. Moreover, displaying a p24 broadcast on an i50 system (such as PAL) requires the speed of video and audio be increased by over 4% (to 25 frames per second).

Therefore a hybrid is often used for movies and the like: the frames (25 or 30 per second) are segmented into two interlaced fields with equal time index (psf, progressive in or with segmented frames). The deinterlacer has to perform a simple weave only. This ensures compatibility with 1080i50/60 with only little less coding efficiency than 1080p25/30 and half the bandwidth requirement of 1080p50/60, but the SDTV problems of PAL speed-up and Telecine judder remain.

It would be nonsensical to transmit any signal with a frame rate significantly higher than its source’s, which is 24 Hz for movies.

Television resolution
LDTV 240i60, 288i50 (CIF)
SDTV 480i60 (NTSC), 480p30, 576i50 (PAL, SÉCAM), 576p25
EDTV 480p60, 576p50, 720i50, 720i60, 720p24, 720p25, 720p30
HDTV 720p50, 720p60, 1080p24, 1080p25, 1080p30, 1080i50, 1080i60
Progressive, Interlaced
Image:Videores.png


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