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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. Apparatus for recovering a secondary signal which has been previously
encoded on a video signal which encoding utilizes a modulated signal
responsive to said secondary signal which modulated signal was combined
with said video signal without increasing the bandwith required by said
video signal or causing substantial amount of synchronizing information to
be deleted from said video signal, including in combination separator
means responsive to said video signal to determine the points on said
video signal from which said modulated signal may be recovered in response
to a clocking signal phase locked to said video and demodulator means
responsive to said separator means and said modulated signal to recover
said secondary signal.
2. Apparatus for decoding a secondary signal which has been combined with
and transmitted as part of a television video signal including in
combination separator means responsive to blanking areas of said video
signal which areas include the video portion of the vertical blanking
interval of said video signal and further responsive to a sampling signal
phase locked to the synchronizing portion of said video signal to
determine the points on said video signal from which said combined
secondary signal may be recovered and demodulator means responsive to said
separator means and said video signal to recover and output an output
signal essentially the same as said secondary signal.
3. Apparatus as claimed in claim 1 or 2 wherein said separator means is
responsive to said video signal to provide a clocking signal utilized by
said demodulator means which demodulator means contains an analog memory
responsive to said clocking signal to output analog samples at a
predetermined rate.
4. Apparatus as claimed in claim 1 or 2 wherein said modulated signal is a
difference signal derived from present and past portions of said secondary
signal.
5. Apparatus as claimed in claim 1 or 2 wherein said modulated signal is a
multiple level signal which is constrained in amplitude to three or more
distinct levels.
6. Apparatus for recovering from a first video signal a secondary signal
which was previously used to generate an analog modulated signal which
modulated signal was combined with said video signal including in
combination separator means to generate a third signal phase locked to the
sync pulses of said video signal to determine the location of said
modulated signal, storage means responsive to said third signal phase
locked to sync pulses of said separator means and said video signal to
recover and store said modulated signal from said determined locations in
said video signal which storage means outputs said modulated signal at a
constant rate and further including low pass filter means operable in
response to said storage means to output analog information which is
essentially the same as said secondary signal.
7. Apparatus as claimed in claim 6 wherein said storage means samples said
modulated signal at predetermined locations in the blanking area of said
video signal which samples are stored in said storage means with said low
pass filter means responsive to said samples to output said output analog
information.
8. Apparatus as claimed in claims 1, 2, 6 or 7 wherein said secondary
signal is a television program audio signal said video signal has the same
number of synchronizing pulses before and after said combination and said
modulated signal is a pulse amplitude modulated signal previously
generated in response to said secondary signal which pulse amplitude
modulated signal in input to said demodulator means which demodulator
means processes said modulated signal effecting recovery of said secondary
signal which processing includes removing modulating frequency components
from said modulated signal.
9. Apparatus for decoding a sampled audio frequency signal which is carried
in pulse modulated form on a television video signal in the blanking
interval thereof which video signal contains synchronizing pulses
unaffected in quantity by such carriage including in combination separator
means responsive to said video signal to provide clocking pulses locating
the position of the sampled audio frequency signal and demodulation means
response to said clocking pulses and the television video signal to sample
said modulated sampled audio frequency signal at predetermined locations
in the blanking interval to recover said pulse modulated signal from the
television video signal, which apparatus includes filter means to perform
sample frequency filtering of said recovered pulse modulated signal.
10. The method of decoding an audio frequency signal which was previously
encoded in the blanking interval of a television video signal which video
signal is passed through or stored on standard video equipment, including
a step of sampling said encoded audio frequency signal on said video
signal at predetermined locations in the blanking interval thereof said
locations determined in response to sync pulses of said video signal, a
step of temporarily storing said samples in a memory, a step of outputting
said samples from said memory at a steady rate and a further step of
removing encoding related components from said output samples thus
recovering said audio frequency signal.
11. The method of recovering a secondary signal which was previously used
to generate a modulated signal which modulated signal is carried on a
television video signal without reducing the number of synchronizing
pulses of said video signal including a step of generating a first
clocking signal responsive to synchronizing information of said video
signal and generating a second stable clocking signal, a step of sampling
said modulated signal in response to said first clocking signal, a step of
storing said samples in a memory, a step of removing said samples from
said memory in response to said second clocking signal and a further step
of filtering said removed samples to recover said secondary signal.
12. The method as claimed in claim 11 wherein said modulated signal is a
difference signal derived from past and present portions secondary signal.
13. The method of restoring a continuous secondary signal which has been
compressed in time and combined in analog form with a video signal without
substantially reducing the number of synchronizing pulses of said video
signal including a step of sampling said video signal to produce an
intermittent secondary signal, a step of storing said intermittent
secondary signal produced by said sampling, a step of continuously
retrieving said stored intermittent secondary signal and a step of
converting retrieved signals to a continuous analog signal essentially the
same as said continuous secondary signal.
14. The method as claimed in claim 13 wherein said intermittent secondary
signal is stored in analog form.
15. The method as claimed in claim 13 wherein said intermittent secondary
signal is digitized as part of said sampling step, stored in digitized
form in said storage step and converted from digital back to analog as
part of said converting step.
16. The method as claimed in claim 13 wherein said continuous secondary
signal is a multiple level signal having three or more distinct levels.
17. An apparatus for receiving low bandwidth signals transmitted as part of
a television signal having a timing pulse and a section without
substantive picture related information, the transmission including
converting the low bandwidth signals into an intermittent sped up
modulated signal related to the timing pulse and including the modulated
signal into the section of the television signal without substantive
picture related information to be transmitted therewith, said receiving
apparatus comprising meas to separate the sped up intermittent modulated
signal from the section of the television signal without substantive
picture related information, said separation means utilizing the timing
pulse of the television signal, and means to reconvert theseparated sped
up intermittent modulated signal back into a signal substantially
equivalent to the low bandwidth signal.
18. The apparatus of claim 17 characterized in that the intermittent
modulated signal has a frequency related to the television signal.
19. The apparatus of claim 17 wherein the television signal has a
horizontal sync rate and characterized in that the intermittent modulated
signal utilizes the horizontal sync rate of the television signal as the
timing pulse.
20. An apparatus for receiving a low bandwidth signal transmitted as part
of a television signal having a timing pulse and a section without
substantive picture related information, the television signal including
the low bandwidth signal having sampled at one clock rate, and converted
into an analog intermittent signal at a different second clock rate, the
intermittent signal having substantially the same information as the low
bandwidth signal, the second clock rate being related to the timing pulse
of the television signal, and combining the intermittent signal into the
section of the television signal without substantive picture related
information for transmission with the television signal, said receiving
apparatus comprising means to receive the television signal including the
intermittent signal, uncombining means to separate the intermittent signal
from the television signal, said uncombining means having a clock rate
substantially equal to the second clock rate, and means to reconvert the
intermittent signal back into a signal substantially equivalent to the low
bandwidth signal.
21. The apparatus of claim 20 characterized in that said clock rate of said
uncombining measn utilizes to the timing pulse of the television signal.
22. The apparatus of claims 20 or 21 wherein the television signal has a
horizontal sync timing and characterized in that the second clock rate is
responsive to the horizontal sync timing of the television signal. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to encoding and decoding audio frequency signals on
a television video signal while maintaining said video signal in a
standard form, thus eliminating audio to video delay problems and
providing high quality audio frequency channels.
2. Description of the Prior Art
As television technology develops, several previously unforseen audio
related problems are also developing. One of these problems pertains to
properly maintaining the timing or synchronization relationship of audio
and video signals. This problem was explained in U.S. Pat. No. 4,313,135
which may be referred to for further details. Another problem is that
normal broadcast television audio is limited to one channel of 5 KHz
bandwidth. With the drastic improvements in television video equipment
over the past years, the image quality of television programs now far
surpasses the audio quality. There is a great need for a device which can
improve the audio quality of a television program, preferably to a stereo
high fidelity level, and which can encode this audio in the video signal
to prevent audio to video delay problems. Such an encoded audio system
will have substantial cost benefits in the transmission of television
programs by eliminating the need for a separate audio channel.
Several television systems exist which add digitized audio in one form or
another in the blanking interval of the television video signal. This
sytem has been used as a scrambling technique where it is desirable to
prevent unauthorized viewing of the television program. Digitized audio
requires a great deal of bandwidth, thus causing a substantial portion of
the video blanking interval to be filled with digital data seriously
affecting sync and burst. Unfortunately, this digital audio in blanking is
not directly compatable with existing video systems and the digital audio
conversion components, i.e. A-D and D-A, are fairly expensive. The digital
audio in blanking does work well as a scrambled system because the digital
information requires most sync information to be removed causing
television receivers to malfunction.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The inventive concept herein disclosed provides an apparatus and method for
encoding signals having a bandwidth lower than video signals which may or
may not be program related, on a television video signal. Said apparatus
and method described herein provides a pulse modulation means responsive
to a signal such as a television audio signal to provide an analog
modulated signal, a combination circuit to combine said modulated signal
with said video signal at predetermined locations in said video signal's
waveform while allowing said video signal to remain in a form which can be
passed by standard video equipment with little or no modification. Also
described are an associated decoder having separation means responsive to
aforementioned video signal containing modulated signal to recover said
modulated signal from said video signal and filter means to reconstruct
the audio frequency signal which was input to the above encoder. The
ability of low cost equipment to encode one or more audio frequency
signals on a video signal while maintaining said video in a standard form
is a very important feature of this invention. If said audio frequency
signal is chosen to be program related, such as timecode or program audio,
audio to video timing relationships are inherently preserved since both
signals are always passed through the same delay after their combination.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a drawing of a typical Horizontal Blanking Waveform of an NTSC or
PAL video signal.
FIG. 2 is a drawing of the waveform of FIG. 1 with modulated pulses added
after burst.
FIG. 3 is a drawing of a typical vertical interval showing audio samples
for lines 1-9 combined in line 10.
FIG. 4 is a drawing of a pulse modulation signal system with typical
waveforms.
FIG. 5 is a block diagram of a 4 cell FIFO.
FIG. 6 is a block diagram of an audio in video transmission system showing
an encoder and a decoder.
FIG. 7 is a block diagram of a differential analog pulse modulation system.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
FIG. 1 is a drawing of a typical video signal horizontal waveform showing
sync 1, color burst 2, back porch after burst 3, active video leading edge
4, active video trailing edge 5.
FIG. 2 is a drawing of the same waveform as FIG. 1 with modulated pulses 6,
7, 8 and 9 added in the back porch after burst.
FIG. 3 is a drawing of a typical video signal vertical waveform showing
modulated pulses 10 on a video line with expanded drawing showing detail
of 10 having pulses 11, 12, 13 and 14.
FIG. 4 is a drawing of a pulse modulation signal system showing signal
input 15, sample input 16, switch 17, transmission channel 18, switch 19,
hold capacitor 20, low pass filter 21, signal output 22, buffer amplifiers
23a, b and c, input waveform 24 corresponding to 15, sample waveform 25
corresponding to 18, sample and hold waveform 26 corresponding to 20 and
output waveform 27 corresponding to 22.
FIG. 5 is a drawing of a first in first out memory (FIFO) showing audio
input 28, buffer amplifiers 23d and e, analog multiplexers 29a and b hold
capacitors 30a-d input clock input 31 output clock input 32 counters 33a
and b and set input 34.
FIG. 6 is a drawing of the preferred embodiment of the invention as used in
a system having an encoder made of combiner 46 and modulator 47 and having
a decoder made of a separator 48 and demodulator 49. Combiner 46 is
composed of buffer 23f having video input 35, adder 36, sync stripper 38a,
phase lock loop 39a, timing generator 40a, and switch 41. Modulator 47 is
composed of FIFOs 43a and b having audio inputs 42a and b respectively.
The decoder is composed of Separator 48 and Demodulator 49. Separator 48
is composed of buffer 23g having video output 37, sync stripper 38b, phase
locked loop 39b, and timing generator 40b. Demodulator 49 is composed of
FIFOs 43c and d, low pass filters 44a and b having outputs 45a and b
respectively. Encoded video and audio from aforementioned encoder pass
thru transmission channel 45 to the decoder.
FIG. 7 is a differential pulse amplitude system having difference amplifier
50, sample and hold circuits 51a and b, integrators 52a and b,
transmission channel 53, low pass filter 54, resampler 55 and showing
optional connections 56a and b used when 55 and 51b are deleted.
In the preferred form of the invention, a relatively low bandwidth signal,
which may be a time code signal, control signal, chroma signal, program
audio or other low frequency signal, but which signal will be called an
audio signal in this description, is sampled periodically as in a pulse
amplitude modulation system and the pulses from the sampler are combined
with and transmitted as part of the video signal. At the receiving end the
pulses are recovered from the video by resampling by a sample and hold
which drives a low pass filter to recover the audio signal. An example of
such a sampled signal system without the video combination is shown in
FIG. 4. Waveform 24 shows the analog signal input at AF input 15 in the
block diagram. Waveform 25 shows the output of sample switch 17 which is
caused to sample the buffered AF waveform by an external oscillator (not
shown) which sampled waveform is transmitted via channel 18 to buffer
amplifier 23b. The output of buffer amplifier 23b is resampled at an
appropriate time, related to sample signal 16, by switch 19 which samples
are held during open periods of 19 by hold capacitor 20 which waveform is
shown by 26. The hold waveform on 20 is buffered by 23c and passed through
low pass filter 21 to AF output 22 which is shown by 27 which output is
essentially the same as the input waveform 24. The above described circuit
is a variation of textbook examples of sampled signal systems. Further
information of design criteria for these systems relating to signal to
noise, bandwidths, spectrum and alias considerations for various pulse
modulation techniques which would be suitable for use in this invention
may be found in "Reference Data For Radio Engineers", Howard W. Sams &
Co., Indianapolis, Ind. 46268; .circle.C 1975. Chapter 23 is particularly
useful and several further references are given. Such pulse modulation
systems include but are not limited to pulse amplitude modulation, pulse
position modulation, pulse phase modulation, pulse duration modulation and
multilevel pulse amplitude modulation. Also of interest are delta
modulation and the family of differential encoding techniques which
transmit binary digits in response to the change in an analog signal from
one sample time to the next. These systems are not limited in dynamic
range as are pulse modulation and binary pulse amplitude modulation
systems. Since in high quality audio systems a dynamic range in excess of
80 db is desirable, differential encoding techniques become attractive
although they are generally more difficult to implement than analog pulse
amplitude modulation systems. Further information on delta modulation and
differential encoding may be found in "Principles of Pulse Code
Modulation" by K. W. Cattermole, American Elsevier Publishing Co., New
York, NY 10017, pages 198-241. In all of the above listed pulse modulation
techniques some analog parameter of a pulse such as amplitude, width,
phase or position with respect to a reference; are caused to vary in
response to a modulating signal. Of particular interest are pulse
amplitude modulation such as described with FIG. 4 and multilevel pulse
amplitude modulation because of their relative simplicity and low cost. In
the former system the pulse amplitude is caused to vary in a linear
fashion in response to the amplitude of the input modulating signal. This
is the system which is the preferred system for the invention described
herein due to its simplicity and low cost. The major disadvantage of this
modulation system is that it will have a dynamic range limited by the
video channel to around 60 db which is somewhat lower than desirable. If
the limited dynamic range becomes a problem in a particular application it
can be considerably improved by use of differential pulse modulation such
as the differential pulse amplitude system, believed to be previously
unknown, such as shown in FIG. 7 which will be discussed later.
The multilevel pulse amplitude system previously mentioned is similar to
the pulse amplitude system shown in FIG. 4 however the pulse amplitude is
allowed to assume only a limited number of discrete steps. This multilevel
system allows a much better signal to noise ratio and dynamic range than
the pulse amplitude system at a cost in complexity and bandwidth. For
quality audio signals it is required to transmit a number of multilevel
pulses for each sample of the modulating signal allowing several hundred
possible levels for each sample. A typical system might transmit 4 pulses
constrained to eight levels giving 4096 level precision for each audio
sample resulting in poorer utilization of the transmitting channel in
order to achieve a better signal to noise ratio. Further discussion of
alternate modulation schemes will not be given as one skilled in the art
could adapt any of several modulation schemes for use in this invention.
The inventive part of this apparatus and method involves taking the
periodically generated pulses output from the sample switch (or modulator)
and inserting them in a predetermined position in the video waveform.
Since analog pulses or samples are inserted in the video much less space
is needed than with digital systems, thus very little disturbance to the
video is generated. FIG. 1 shows a typical television waveform having
horizontal sync 1, color burst 2, back porch after burst 3, leading active
video 4 and trailing active video 5. FIG. 2 shows the same waveform with
four sample pulses 6-9 added in the back porch. This location is the
preferred location for adding sample pulses in horizontal blanking since
it allows the video signal to be processed by most standard video
equipment with little or no modification. Other locations, such as the
front porch in the video waveform may be used, however, care must be used
so that the pulses do not cause disturbances to the active video, by
interfering with synchronization pulses or color burst. It is worthwhile
to note here that it is not practical to use only this horizontal back
porch area for encoding bits in normal digital audio applications due to
the large number of digital bits required. For a typical video signal
bandwidth of 5 MHZ it would only be possible to insert around 8 digital
bits per horizontal line in the back porch, an insufficient number of bits
for most audio signals. Typical state of the art digital audio systems
utilize the entire blanking interval for digital bits causing a great deal
of interference with, or removal of, sync or burst. Six amplitude
modulated pulses per line will however be quite adequate for two high
fidelity audio signals and will fit in the 1.4 ms space available on the
back porch. Inserting the amplitude modulated pulses into the
predetermined location of the video waveform is not a trivial problem.
With digitized audio the digital bits are simply stored in a RAM as they
are developed and then read out at the appropriate time. There is,
however, no analog equivalent of a digital RAM available as a manufactured
device, only analog delay lines which could be used but are fairly
expensive. The circuit invented to perform the necessary time compression
function in a low cost fashion is an analog first in first out memory
shown in FIG. 5.
The first in first out analog memory or FIFO of FIG. 5 is constructed of
two buffer amplifiers 23d and e, two 4 position analog multiplexers 29a
and b which are driven from four bit digital counters 33a and b, and four
hold capacitors 30a-d. To understand the operation of the FIFO, assume a
short pulse at set input 34, sets counters 33a to count 1 and 33b to count
3. Both counters count 1,2,3,4,1 etc. Audio is input to buffer 23d at 28
and the buffer in turn charges capacitor 30a (because 33a is on count 1)
with the audio signal. Next, assume a clock pulse arrives at 31 causing
counter 33a to count to 2 allowing buffer 23d to charge capicator 30b.
Capacitor 30a will now be holding the charge that was placed on it by the
input audio signal at the instant before counter 33a changed count. At
each count, the audio signal will charge another capacitor in sequence in
effect creating a multiplexed sample and hold. Alternately, for low clock
frequencies it may be desired to cause counter circuit 33a to output only
a short pulse rather than a count length pulse as described above. This
short pulse would effect a more precise sample and hold. The short pulse
could be simply effected by differentiating the counter output with an RC
Network. Now assume multiplexer 29b is allowing each stored charge in turn
to be fed into buffer amplifier 23e in response to output clock input to
counter 33 b at 32. The output clock does not need to be synchronous with
the input clock, only the same frequency. The output to input clock
relationship must be such that a new sample is not put on a capacitor
until the old has been read out, and a new sample cannot be read out of a
capacitor until it has been put on. One skilled in the art will see that
by increasing the number of hold sections in this scheme a quite large
variation of input clock to output clock phase may be handled providing
that the average frequency of the two clocks is exactly the same, i.e.,
one sample is clocked out for every one clocked in. This will provide for
temporary storage of samples, allowing samples to be generated at a steady
rate, stored and read ou at an intermittant rate. This FIFO memory system
is used to generate and store analog samples of an audio input and read
out those samples in correct sequence when necessary to insert them in the
prope location in the video waveform. This FIFO can be easily built by one
skilled in the art using standard integrated circuits. The buffer
amplifiers 23d and e could be a National Semiconductor LF347, the counters
33a and b a type 74LS163 the analog multiplexers 29a and b could be a
National Semiconductor LF11509. If large enough volume were anticipated it
would be possible to build an analog FIFO integrated circuit using MOS
charge coupled device technology.
FIG. 6 shows the preferred embodiment of the invention in a system
configuration. An encoder made up of a modulator 47 and combiner 46 has as
its input two audio channels and an associated video signal. The signals
applied at the audio channels need not be program audio but any signal
such as those previously described. It should be noted that in this
example the audio signals are D.C. offset to an amount corresponding to
1/2 of the peak positive video voltage to ensure that no negative pulses
are added to the video signal. Audio inut on 42a and b is applied to FIFOs
43a and b respectively. A clocking signal at exactly twice the video
horizontal rate is also input to said FIFO's input clock causing said
FIFOs to periodically sample the audio signals, thus effecting pulse
amplitude modulation. The clocking signal may be derived from an
oscillator utilized in the timing of the input video signal or from a
phase locked loop responsive to said input video. At the appropriate time
during horizontal blanking, as determined by timing generator 40a, and
corresponding to positions 6- 9 of FIG. 2, the previously stored samples
or modulated pulses are clock out of said FIFO's 43a and b. Said pulses
clocked out are time multiplexed by switch 41 in response to timing
generator 40a which time multiplexed pulses are added to aforementioned
input video which has been buffered by 23f by adder 36. When pulses are
not being inserted switch 41 selects ground, allowing video to pass
through adder 36 unchanged. The combination of said multiplexed pulses and
buffered video will appear typically as shown in FIG. 2, which combination
is output from aforementioned encoder and passed through transmission
channel 45 to the decoder. Phase lock loop 39a and timing generator 40a
are driven from sync stripper 38a which recovers information from buffered
video signal output from 23f. Phase lock loop 39a generates a clocking
signal exactly twice the horizontal sync rate of the video signal which
provides a precise frequency for the pulse modulation. Alternately a
precision oscillator or external reference could be used, and frequencies
other than multiples of horizontal may be used. Timing generator 40a
ensures that exactly the same number of pulses are taken out of said FIFOs
as are input. This is a relatively simple process during active video
lines, however, during the vertical sync it is undesirable to insert
pulses in vertical sync. The timing generator 40a must therefore not
insert pulses during vertical which causes each FIFO 43a and b to store
the 18 pulses (2 pulses per H.times.9 H) generated in each audio channel
until after the vertical sync, where all of the stored pulses are then
inserted in video as is shown in FIG. 3. It is also possible to store all
samples made during the video frame, field or a longer period of time and
combine those samples with video in the vertical interval thus comprising
the audio signal in time. The need for adding pulses in horizontal
blanking is eliminated, thus absolutely no changes are made to the
horizontal blanking interval. If pulse amplitude modulation is utilized,
as in this example, the compressed pulse amplitude modulated signal will
be inherently bandwidth limited by most practical video equipment so that
the modulated audio signal will appear to be an unmodulated but compressed
audio signal. It will however in the technical sense remain a modulated
signal. The main disadvantage to this system is the large FIFO
requirement. A CCD analaog delay line containing internal sample and holds
could replace the FIFOs, however, the CCD devices are expensive and thus
somewhat undesirable. All of the parts to build the above described device
are standard integrated circuits except the FIFOs which were previously
described. Buffer amplifier 23f is a LH0002, Adder 26 is high slew rate
operation amplifier LH0024, Sync Stripper 38a is a LM741 and TBA950-2,
phase lock loop 39a is a LM565 and a DM8530, timing generator 40a is made
from 74LS221's and Switch 41 is a LF11509. All part numbers are for
National Semiconductor. The FIFOs could be replaced with CCD analog delays
such as a Fairchild CCD321 or digital circuits with A-D and D-A converters
if the higher cost were not a problem. Transmission Channel 45 may be any
means capable of passing, recording or storing a video signal. The video
signal containing modulated pulses having passed through 45 is input to
the decoder at buffer 23g which outputs buffered video at video output 37.
Buffered video also drives sync stripper 38b which in turn provides
signals for phase lock loop 39b and timing generator 40b. Phase lock loop
39b and timing generator 40b perform essentially the same functions as 39a
and 40a respectively, allowing pulses on video to be resampled at the
appropriate time by the FIFOs thus recovering the pulses from the video
and at the same time performing a sample and hold function. FIFOs 43c and
43d perform a reverse function to that provided by 43a and b where pulses
in video are sampled and stored by said first mentioned FIFOs when they
are present and clocked out of said FIFOs at a steady rate to drive low
pass filters 44a and 44b. Filters 44a and b restore the pulses input to
them to audio signals output at 45a and 45b respectively. The above
described circuit thus effects demodulation of hte modulated pulses. FIFOs
43c and d should be clocked with the short sample and hold clock
previously described to prevent video from being clocked into the FIFOs.
The preferred embodiment of the herein described invention utilizes two
high performance audio channels to provide stereo audio having a signal
bandwidth of 10 KHz. This configuration allows a modulation frequency at a
multiple of Horizontal to be used which greatly simplifies clock recovery
for the decoder, a valuable feature of this embodiment of the invention.
The input low pass filter normally found in modulators have been omitted
since it is assumed the audio equipment which feeds this invention will be
properly filtered. The modulation frequency chosen could be lowered if
according to Nyquist limitations the input audio bandwidth were further
limited. Of particular interest is a case where the modulation frequency
is chosen to be 1/10 or less of the video horizontal rate. Modulated
pulses can then be generated and immediately added to video directly
during horizontal blanking with no FIFO storage required. FIFO clocks may
then be chosen so that they straddle the vertical sync area thus further
eliminating the need for FIFO storage. In this situation the FIFO function
becomes only a sample function. The phase lock loop function becomes a
divider reset by vertical and performing a divide by 10, clocked at the
horizontal rate. Of course, this system too with a large enough analog
memory such as previously described CCD technology all of the audio
swamples in a field, frame or longer period of time could be stored and
then inserted in the active video portion of vertical interval lines. The
storage could, of course, be accomplished with digital memories, however,
this will greatly increase the cost.
FIG. 7 shows an analog pulse amplitude modulation system which has been
adapted to make a differential system suitable for use with this
invention. Audio is input to difference amplifier 50 where it is
subtracted from the output of integrator 52a. The output of 50 is
periodically sampled by sample and hold amplifier 51a providing samples
for integrator 52a. Integrator 52a charges up or down in response to
aforementioned samples to provide a singal essentially the same as the
input audio signal during the previous clock period thus the difference
amplifier 50 outputs the difference or error between the integrator and
input signal over one clock cycle.
The signal output from 52a may be said to be responsive to past components
of the audio signal input to 50. Assuming resampler 55 and sample and hold
51b are not used and alternate connections 56a and b are made, the samples
output from sample and hold 51a are transmitted over Channel 53 to second
integrator 52b, identical to 52a. Integrator 52b output is the same as the
output from 52a which is essentially the same as the input audio signal,
which second integrator output is passed through low pass filter 54 to the
modulation system output. Low pass filter 54 removes the clock frequency
stepping of the output signal. When utilized in the system of FIG. 6 the
output of 51a would be input to FIFO 43a or b represented by 55 (56a and b
are removed) and sample and hold 51b would be performed by FIFO 43c or d
respectively. Sample and hold 51b drives integrator 52b which operates the
same as previously described since the output of 51b is essentially the
same as the output of 51a except delayed slightly. Channel 53 includes the
rest of the functions of FIG. 6.
The above described differential pulse amplitude modulation system serves
to provide the wide dynamic range of normal delta modulation systems but
has a much lower clock rate than the delta system due to the fact that the
transmitted sample is analog instead of digital. It does, of course,
contain more circuitry than the normal pulse amplitude modulation system
shown in FIG. 5 and is therefore not as desirable from a cost standpoint.
As previously mentioned being able to encode one or more high quality audio
signals on a video signal without affecting the active portion of said
video and preserving the sync and blanking portions of said video so that
it may be passed through standard video equipment is a very important
feature of this invention. The low cost of this invention, which relates
to the ability to use analog techniques in place of A-D and D-A converters
and locking the modulating frequency (FIFO clock) to video horizontal, is
another important feature. In addition to the basic function of encoding
audio on video it would also be possible to secure the audio signal by
scrambling the pulses in response to some scrambling means, such as a
pseudo random sequence, before or as they are added to the video. This
function could be added to timing generators 40a and 40b of FIG. 6. A
scrambling means which could be easily adapted to this function is
described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 306,491 now abandoned. The
audio scrambler would be especially secure if multilevel pulse amplitude
modulation were used and the pulse levels were scrambled. The video signal
could, of course, also be scrambled. This would give a completely secured
television signal having normal sync and blanking and requiring only a
standard video channel for transmission.
Although this invention has been described in its preferred form with a
certain degree of particularity, it is understood that the present
disclosure of the preferred form has been made only by way of example and
that numerous changes in the details of construction and the combination
and arrangement of parts may be resorted to as well as the combination of
functions within or as part of other devices, without departing from the
spirit and the scope of the invention as hereinafter claimed.
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