AES/EBU
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AES/EBU
The digital audio standard frequently called AES/EBU, officially known as AES3, is used for carrying digital audio signals between various devices. It was developed by the Audio Engineering Society (AES) and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and first published in 1985, later revised in 1992 and 2003. Both AES and EBU versions of the standard exist. Several different physical connectors are also defined as part of the overall group of standards. A related system, S/PDIF, was developed essentially as a consumer version of AES/EBU, using connectors more commonly found in the consumer market.
Hardware connectionsThe AES3 standard parallels part 4 of the international standard IEC 60958. Of the physical interconnection types defined by IEC 60958, three are in common use:
The AES-3id standard defines a 75-ohm BNC electrical variant of AES3. More recently, professional equipment (notably by Sony) has used this physical interconnection type. This uses the same cabling, patching and infrastructure as analogue or digital video, and is thus common in the broadcast industry. F05 connectors, 5mm connectors for plastic optical fiber, are more commonly known by their Toshiba brand name, TOSLINK. The precursor of the IEC 60958 Type II specification was the Sony/Philips Digital Interface, or S/PDIF. For details on the format of AES/EBU data, see the article on S/PDIF. Note that the electrical levels differ between AES/EBU and S/PDIF. For information on the synchronization of digital audio structures, see the AES11 standard. The ability to insert unique identifiers into an AES3 bit stream is covered by the AES52 standard. Other AES3 transport structures. AES3 digital audio format can also be carried over an Asynchronous Transfer Mode network. The standard for packing AES3 frames into ATM cells is AES47, and is also published as IEC 62365. The ProtocolThe low-level protocol for data transmission in AES/EBU and S/PDIF is largely identical, and the following discussion applies for S/PDIF as well unless otherwise noted. AES/EBU was designed primarily to support PCM encoded audio in either DAT format at 48 kHz or CD format at 44.1 kHz. No attempt was made to use a carrier able to support both rates; instead, AES/EBU allows the data to be run at any rate, and recovers the clock rate by encoding the data use Biphase mark code (BMC). The bit stream consists of the PCM audio data broken down into small samples and inserted into a larger structure that also carries various status and information data. The highest level organization is the audio block, which roughly corresponds to a number of samples of the PCM data. Each block is broken into 192 frames numbered 0 to 191. Each frame is further divided in 2 subframes (or channels): A (left) and B (right). Each subframe contains the information for one single sample of the PCM audio, or more simply, one channel of audio. Each subframe is organized into 32 time slots numbered 0 to 31, each of which corresponds roughly to a single bit. Not all of the time slots send actual audio data: a number of them are set aside for signaling use, and others for transmitting data about the channels. In normal use only 20 time slots are used for audio, providing a 20-bit sound quality (compare with a CD at 16 bits per sample). So a complete audio block basically contains 192 samples from two channels of audio and other data, containing 12288 bits in total. The 32 bits of the time slots are used as following: Time slots 0 to 3They do not actually carry any data but they facilitate clock recovery and subframe identification. They are not BMC encoded so they are unique in the data stream and they are easier to recognize, but they don't represent real bits. Their structure minimizes the DC component on the transmission line. Three preambles are possible :
They are called X, Y, Z from AES standard; M, W,B from the IEC 958 (an AES extension). The 8-bit preambles are transmitted in the same time allocated to four time slots at the start of each sub-frame (time slots 0 to 3). Time slots 4 to 7These time slots can carry auxiliary information such as a low-quality auxiliary audio channel for producer talkback or studio-to-studio communication. Alternately, they can be used to enlarge the audio word-length to 24 bits, although the devices at either end of the link must be able to use this non-standard format. Time slots 8 to 27These time slots carry 20 bits of audio information starting with LSB and ending with MSB. If the source provides fewer than 20 bits, the unused LSBs will be set to the logical "0" (for example, for the 16-bit audio read from CDs bits 8-11 are set to 0). Time slots 28 to 31These time slots carry associated bits as follows:
The Channel Status Bit in AES/EBUAs stated before there is one channel status bit in each subframe, making one 192 bit word for each channel in each block. This 192 bit word is usually presented as 192/8 = 24 bytes. The contents of the channel status bit are completely different between the AES3 and SPDIF standards. In the case of AES3, the standard describes in detail how the bits have to be used. Here is an overview showing the broad aims of the 24 bytes:
See alsoReferences
External links
ca:AES/EBU de:AES/EBU es:AES3 id:AES/EBU it:AES/EBU nn:AES3
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