thumb|right|300px|SDTV resolution by nation; countries using 480i are in green.
480i is the
video mode used for
standard-definition analog or
digital television in the
Caribbean,
Myanmar,
Japan,
South Korea,
Taiwan,
Philippines,
Laos,
Western Sahara, and most of the
Americas (with the exception of
Argentina,
Paraguay, and
Uruguay). The ''480'' identifies a vertical resolution of 480 lines, and the ''i'' identifies it as an
interlaced resolution. The
field rate, which is 60
Hz (or 59.94 Hz when used with NTSC color), is sometimes included when identifying the video mode, i.e. 480i60; another notation, endorsed by both the
International Telecommunication Union in
BT.601 and SMPTE in
SMPTE 259M, includes the
frame rate, as in 480i/30. The other common standard, used in the other parts of the world, is
576i.
In analogue contexts, this resolution is often called "525 lines". It is mandated by
CCIR Systems M and J, which are usually paired with
NTSC color - which led to the "NTSC" name being often inaccurately used to refer to this video mode. Other color encodings have also been used with System M, notably
PAL-M in
Brazil.
Technical details
For analog NTSC, there are a total of 525 scanning lines per frame of which originally 483 lines were visible (241.5 visible lines per field + 21 lines of vertical blanking per field = 483 + 42 = 525 lines per frame) and later 480 (240 complete lines per field).
or quad video recording systems, the math suggests 15 transverse head passes, each consisting of 16 lines of video, are required to complete one field. A full frame consists of two fields. One field contains the odd-numbered lines and the other contains the even ones. By convention an NTSC video frame is considered to start with an even field followed by an odd field. The disparity of the line numbering compared to other systems is solved by defining the line numbering to start five equalizing pulses (or 2 and a half lines) earlier than on all other systems (including Systems A and E even though they had no equalizing pulses) on the first equalizing pulse following an active line or half line. This has the effect of placing a half line of video at the end of the even (first) field and the beginning of the odd (second field). Thus the line numbers correspond to the real lines of the video frame. On all other systems, the field was considered to start with the falling edge of the first field pulse which gave the confusing position that the odd field (first) had a half a line of video occupying the latter half of a whole line and ended with a whole line of video but half a scanning line (and vice versa for the even field). The NTSC convention solved this confusion.
For DV-NTSC only 480 lines are used. The
digitally transmitted horizontal resolution is usually 720 samples (which includes 16 samples for the horizontal sync and horizontal blanking) or 704 visible
pixels with an
aspect ratio of 4:3 (with vertically rectangular pixels) and therefore a display resolution of 640 × 480 (
VGA); that is
standard-definition television (SDTV) with a 4:3 aspect ratio (with square pixels).
Glossary - 480i
/ref>
The field rate (not the frame rate) is usually (60/1.001) = 59.94 hertz for color TV and is often incorrectly rounded up to 60 Hz. There are several conventions for written shorthands for the combination of resolution and rate: 480i60, 480i/30 (EBU/SMPTE always use frame rate to specify interlaced formats) and 480/60i. 480i is usually used in countries that conventionally use NTSC (most of the Americas and Japan), because the 525 transmitted lines at 60 hertz of analogue NTSC contain 480 visible ones.
In each case of the use of the ‘60’ terminology, it is merely shorthand for 59.94, to differentiate it from 30 (29.97) or 24 (23.976).
480i can be transported by all major digital television formats, ATSC, DVB and ISDB, and on DVD.
See also
* Enhanced-definition television (EDTV)
* List of common resolutions
* 4320p, 2160p, 1080p, 1080i, 720p, 576p, 576i, 480p, 360p, 240p
References
{{Video formats
Category:Television terminology
Category:Video formats