SCANNING (Horizontal & Vertical)
- A process is
carried out in the television system. The scene is scanned rapidly both in the
horizontal and vertical directions simultaneously to provide efficient number of
complete pictures or frames per second to give the illusion of continuous
motion.
- Instead of the 24 as in commercial motion picture practice, the frame
repetition rate is 25 per second in most television systems.
- Horizontal
scanning. Fig. shows the trace and retrace of several horizontal lines.
- The linear rise of current in the horizontal deflection coils (Fig. 2.1 (b )) deflects the beam across the screen with a continuous,
uniform motion for the trace from left to right.
- At the peak of the rise, the
sawtooth wave reverses direction and decreases rapidly to its initial value.
- This fast reversal produces the retrace or flyback.
- The start of the horizontal
trace is at the left edge of raster.
- The
finish is at the right edge, where the flyback produces retrace back to the
left edge. edge of raster.
- The finish is at the right edge, where the flyback
produces retrace back to the left edge.
- Note, that ‘up’ on the sawtooth wave
corresponds to horizontal deflection to the right.
- The heavy lines in Fig. 2.1 (a) indicate the useful scanning time and the dashed lines
correspond to the retrace time.


- Vertical scanning. The sawtooth current
in the vertical deflection coils (see Fig. 2.2) moves the electron beam from
top to bottom of the raster at a uniform speed while the electron beam is being
deflected horizontally.
- Thus the beem produces complete horizontal lines one
below the other while moving from top to bottom.
- As
shown in Fig. 2.2 (c), the trace part of
the sawtooth wave for vertical scanning deflects the beam to the bottom of the
raster.
- Then the rapid vertical retrace returns the beam to the top.
- Note that
the maximum amplitude of the vertical sweep current brings the beam to the
bottom of the raster. As shown in Fig. 2.2 (b ) during vertical retrace the horizontal scanning continues
and several lines get scanned during this period.
- Because of motion in the
scene being televised, the information or brightness at the top of the target
plate or picture tube screen normally changes by the time the beam returns to
the top to recommence the whole process.
- This information is picked up during
the next scanning cycle and the whole process is repeated 25 times to cause an
illusion of continuity.
- The actual scanning sequence is however a little more
complex than that just described and is explained in a later section of this
chapter.
- It must however be noted, that both during horizontal retrace and
vertical retrace intervals the scanning beams at the camera tube and picture
tube are blanked and no picture information is either picked up or reproduced.
- Instead, on a time division basis, these short retrace intervals are utilized
for transmitting distinct narrow pulses to keep the sweep oscillators of the
picture tube deflection circuits of the receiver in synchronism with those of
the camera at the transmitter.
- This ensures exact correspondence in scanning at
the two ends and results in distortion less reproduction of the picture
details.
