Digital Audio
Broadcasting(DAB)
is a digital radio technology for broadcasting radio stations, used in several
countries, particularly in Europe.
· Improved features for user’s
· More stations
· Reception quality
· Less pirate interference
· Variable bandwidth
· Transmission costs
Secondary services, like additional sports commentaries
DAB
may offer more radio programmes over a specific spectrum than analogue FM
radio. DAB is more robust with regard to noise and multipath fading for mobile
listening, since DAB reception quality first degrades rapidly when the signal
strength falls below a critical threshold, whereas FM reception quality
degrades slowly with the decreasing signal.
DAB
vs FM/AM
Traditionally
radio programmes were broadcast on different frequencies via FM and AM, and the
radio had to be tuned into each frequency, as needed. This used up a
comparatively large amount of spectrum for a relatively small number of
stations, limiting listening choice. DAB is a digital radio broadcasting system
that through the application of multiplexing and compression combines multiple
audio streams onto a relatively narrow band centered on a single broadcast
frequency called a DAB ensemble.
Benefits
Benefits
of DAB over analogue systems are:
· Improved features for user’s
· More stations
· Reception quality
· Less pirate interference
· Variable bandwidth
· Transmission costs
Technology
· Bands
and modes – DAB
uses a wide-bandwidth broadcast technology and typically spectra have been
allocated for it in Band III (174–240 MHz) and L band (1452–1492 MHz), although
the scheme allows for operation almost anywhere above 30 MHz
· Protocol
stack – From an OSI
model protocol stack viewpoint, the technologies used on DAB inhabit the
following layers: the audio codec inhabits the presentation layer. Below that
is the data link layer, in charge of packet mode statistical multiplexing and
frame synchronization. Finally, the physical layer contains the
error-correction coding, OFDM modulation, and dealing with the over-the-air
transmission and reception of data.
· Services
and ensembles –
Various different services are embedded into one ensemble (which is also
typically called a multiplex). These services can include:
Primary
services, like main radio stations
Secondary services, like additional sports commentaries
Data services
· Electronic Programme Guide (EPG)
· Collections of HTML pages and
digital images (Known as 'Broadcast Web Sites')
· Slideshows, which may be
synchronized with audio broadcasts. For example, a police appeal could be
broadcast with the e-fit of a suspect or CCTV footage.
· Video
· Java Platform Applications
· IP tunneling
· Other raw data
An
upgraded version of this system is DAB+. DAB+ is approximately twice as
efficient as DAB due to the adoption of the AAC+ audio codec, and DAB+ can
provide high quality audio with as low as 64 Kbit/s. Reception qualities will
also be more robust on DAB+ than on DAB due to the addition of Reed-Solomon
error correction coding. More than 20 countries provide DAB transmissions, and
several countries, such as Australia, Italy, Malta, Switzerland and Germany;
have started transmitting DAB+ stations.
In
spectrum management, the bands that are allocated for public DAB services, are
abbreviated with T-DAB, where the "T" stands for terrestrial.
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