Television, system of sending and
receiving pictures and sound by means of electronic signals transmitted through
wires and optical fibers or by electromagnetic radiation. These signals are
usually broadcast from a central source, a television station, to reception
devices such as television sets in homes or relay stations such as those used
by cable television service providers. Television is the most widespread form
of communication in the world. Though most people will never meet the leader of
a country, travel to the moon, or participate in a war, they can observe these
experiences through the images on their television.
Television has a variety of
applications in society, business, and science. The most common use of
television is as a source of information and entertainment for viewers in their
homes. Security personnel also use televisions to monitor buildings,
manufacturing plants, and numerous public facilities. Public utility employees
use television to monitor the condition of an underground sewer line, using a
camera attached to a robot arm or remote-control vehicle. Doctors can probe the
interior of a human body with a microscopic television camera without having to
conduct major surgery on the patient. Educators use television to reach
students throughout the world.
People in the United States
have the most television sets per person of any country, with 835 sets per
1,000 people as of 2000. Canadians possessed 710 sets per 1,000 people during
the same year. Japan, Germany, Denmark, and Finland follow North America in the
number of sets per person.
A television program is
created by focusing a television camera on a scene. The camera changes light
from the scene into an electric signal, called the video signal, which varies
depending on the strength, or brightness, of light received from each part of
the scene. In color television, the camera produces an electric signal that
varies depending on the strength of each color of light.
Audio signals from microphones
placed in or near the scene also flow to the control room, where they are
amplified and combined. Except in the case of live broadcasts (such as news and
sports programs) the video and audio signals are recorded on tape and edited,
assembled with the use of computers into the final program, and broadcast
later. In a typical television station, the signals from live and recorded
features, including commercials, are put together in a master control room to
provide the station's continuous broadcast schedule. Throughout the broadcast
day, computers start and stop videotape machines and other program sources, and
switch the various audio and visual signals. The signals are then sent to the
transmitter.
The transmitter amplifies the video and
audio signals, and uses the electronic signals to modulate, or vary, carrier
waves (oscillating electric currents that carry information). The carrier
waves are combined (diplexed), then sent to the transmitting antenna, usually
placed on the tallest available structure in a given broadcast area. In the
antenna, the oscillations of the carrier waves generate electromagnetic waves
of energy that radiate horizontally throughout the atmosphere. The waves excite
weak electric currents in all television-receiving antennas within range. These
currents have the characteristics of the original picture and sound currents.
The currents flow from the antenna attached to the television into the
television receiver, where they are electronically separated into audio and
video signals. These signals are amplified and sent to the picture tube and the
speakers, where they produce the picture and sound portions of the program.
In digital television broadcasting, the
video and audio signals are digitally compressed as sets of numbers. These
numbers are carried by the broadcast signal but must be decoded by a digital
receiver to be translated back into video and audio signals. Digital
information takes up less bandwidth than an analog signal and greatly reduces
interference and other problems. Picture and sound quality can be much clearer
and more detailed than with analog signals. Multiple digital signals can be
sent at the same time.
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