The new digital radio system Digital Audio Broadcasting (DAB) nowadays often called Digital Radio is a very innovative and universal multimedia broadcast system which will replace the existing AM and FM audio broadcast services in many parts of the world in the near future. DAB is well suited for mobile reception and provides very high robustness against multipath reception. Besides high-quality digital audio services, DAB is able to transmit programme-associated data and a multiplex of other data services including travel and traffic information and still and moving pictures.
Combining the expertise of about 20 leading experts in the field this fully updated new edition introduces the recent international standards, applications and the technical issues of the Eureka 147 DAB system, which is now on the way to become a worldwide solution. Written in an accessible style Digital Audio Broadcasting, Second Edition ensures the rather advanced level of standardisation is referred to for easy access for the reader seeking technical details.
The book explains the basic concepts of DAB Digital Radio including audio processing, data transmission and modulation schemes and how the system can be implemented and operated.
Features such as perceptual audio coding (MPEG-1, -2), OFDM channel coding and modulation, multiplex management (STI) and data transmission protocols (MOT) are described, also practical implications for service provision and new infrastructure required in the studio.
- Covers Electronic Programme Guide (EPG) for DAB, IP-Tunneling via DAB and Metadata
- Includes newer developments concerning audio coding and several additional aspects to audio services
- Covers extended propagation and coverage planning aspects
- Introduces latest developments in Integrated Circuit technology and receiver design
- Provides the current CEPT frequency tables valid for DAB service implementations in Europe, Canada and Australia.
This comprehensive reference provides an excellent guide for broadcasting engineers, planning and system engineers, developers for professional and domestic equipment manufacturers, service and network providers, and broadcast organisations. Postgraduate students and lecturers in communications technology will also find this a useful introduction to the area of digital broadcasting.
About the Author
Wolfgang Hoeg, Dipl.-Ing., AES Fellow, Berlin, Germany, graduated from the University of Technology, Dresden, in electrical engineering and joined the RFZ (Research and Development Centre of Deutsche Post) in 1959. Since 1991 he has been with Deutsche Telekom, and became head of the division "Audiosystems" with Deutsche Telekom Berkom, Berlin. He has worked in various fields of audio engineering, such as two-channel and multi-channel audio, DAB and other new broadcast technologies. As a member of the standardisation bodies of OIRT, ITU-R and EBU, he was acting as a chairman of several project groups. He also contributed to the Eureka 147/DAB Working Groups and chaired the Task group DRC. After retiring from Deutsche telekom in 1999, he has become an audio consultant.
Thomas Lauterbach, Prof. Dr. rer. nat., Nürnberg, Germany, received his Diplom-Physiker degree and PhD from Erlangen University. In 1992 he joined Robert Bosch GambH, where he became involved with the development of DAB. In 1997 head became head of a multimedia systems development department. He was with several Eureka 147/DAB Working Groups, the German DAB platform and Euro-DAB/WorldDAB and contributed to ETSI. He also co-ordinated the MEMO (ACTS) project. Since 1997 he has been with the Georg-Simon-Ohm-Fachhochschule Nürnberg - University of Applied Sciences as a Professor of Physics. He is currently involved in the Digital Radio Mondiale (DRM) project. In 1996 he edited one of the first books on DAB in German.