Engineering:Terrestrial high-definition television

From HandWiki

Terrestrial high-definition television is a form of broadcast high-definition television that is received via the terrestrial airwaves using either a VHF television aerial or a UHF television aerial. Depending on the country, the high definition television channels are broadcasts using either ATSC, ISDB-T, DVB-T or DVB-T2.

Countries that have terrestrial high-definition television

World map of countries that have terrestrial high-definition television.
  Countries with terrestrial HDTV using ATSC
  Countries with terrestrial HDTV using DVB-T and/or DVB-T2
  Countries with terrestrial HDTV using ISDB-T
  Countries without any form of terrestrial HDTV
  No information available

America

  •  United States using ATSC
  •  Canada using ATSC
  •  Brazil using ISDB-T

Europe

Africa

Asia

  •  Japan using ISDB-T
  •  South Korea using ATSC
  •  Israel using DVB-T MPEG-4 under the name IDAN Plus[2]

Oceania

Countries without terrestrial high-definition television

Some countries such as Germany , The Netherlands and Belgium may only broadcasts their channels in standard definition via the terrestrial airwaves. This is largely because the uptake of cable television may be higher than that of terrestrial television, thus giving broadcasters very little incentive to provide their high-definition services via the terrestrial airwaves.

References