Rec. 709
Standard for HDTV image encoding and signal characteristics / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Rec. 709, also known as Rec.709, BT.709, and ITU 709, is a standard developed by ITU-R for image encoding and signal characteristics of high-definition television.
This article possibly contains original research. (June 2023) |
record. Code 709 | |
Status | Approved |
---|---|
First published | November 16, 1993; 30 years ago (1993-11-16)[1][2] |
Latest version | BT.709-6 June 17, 2015; 8 years ago (2015-06-17)[1][3] |
Authors | ITU-R |
Base standards | Rec.709, BT.709, ITU—709 |
Domain | Digital image processing |
Website | www |
The most recent version is BT.709-6 released in 2015. BT.709-6 defines the Picture characteristics as having a (widescreen) aspect ratio of 16:9, 1080 active lines per picture, 1920 samples per line, and a square pixel aspect ratio.
The first version of the standard was approved by the CCIR as Rec.709 in 1990 (there was also CCIR Rec. XA/11 MOD F[4] in 1989), with the stated goal of a worldwide HDTV standard. The ITU superseded the CCIR in 1992, and subsequently released BT.709-1 in November 1993.[2] These early versions still left many unanswered questions, and the lack of consensus toward a worldwide HDTV standard was evident. So much so, some early HDTV systems such as 1035i30 and 1152i25 were still a part of the standard as late as 2002 in BT.709-5.[5]