About Progressive Scan - Sony HT-V1000D Guide Manual

Guide to home theater
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SONY
About
Progressive
Scan
In video, what appears to be a continuously
moving image is actually a series of
discrete still pictures,
called frames.
Each frame lasts 1/30 second each contains 480
scanning lines that appear on the screen.
Because of limitations
in the early days of
television,
these 480 lines were divided into two "fields," each of which lasts 1/60 second.
The first field displays the odd-numbered
scanning lines.
The second field comes
back and displays the even-numbered
scanning lines. This is "interlace"
scanning and it
displays only 240 scanning lines at any one time.
This system of 480-1ine interlaced
display is abbreviated
"480i."
Interlace scanning (left) divides the frame into two "fields." The
first field presents the odd-numbered
scanning lines (1, 3, 5, etc.).
The second field presents the even-numbered
lines.
Progressive scanning (right) creates the picture by illuminating
each line from top to bottom until all scanning lines in the frame
are completed.
Progressive images have twice the vertical
resolution, so they're noticeably clearer and sharper.
And
horizontal scanning lines are far less conspicuous.
In the early days of television,
when 12-inch diagonal
screens were commonly
used in living rooms, showing only 240 lines was not a practical
concern.
But in today's
environment
of 61-inch diagonal projection
systems, the illusion of a continuous
picture
on the screen begins to fall apart.
Depending
on how close to the screen you sit,
individual scanning lines become visible and the compromise
in vertical resolution
becomes an annoyance.
That's why most of today's finest DVD players and big screen
televisions
have the ability to present a progressive
scanning image.
Instead of getting
240 lines, you get 480 lines every 1/60 second.
This 480-line progressive
scanning is
abbreviated
"480p," and it delivers twice the vertical resolution
of conventional
video!
Connect a DVD player with progressive
scan output to a "high scanning,"
"High
Definition
monitor" or "High Definition
upgradeable"
television
and the results are
phenomenal.
You'll see images that are noticeably
smoother and more film-like.
It's less
like television,
more like movies in a theater!
The Sony Guide to Home Theater
9

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