s like these are required to receive analog terrestrial television in
fringe reception areas far from the transmitter.
Europe Following the ST61 conference, UHF frequencies were first used in the UK in 1964 with the introduction of
BBC2. In the UK, VHF channels were kept on the old
405-line system, while UHF was used solely for 625-line broadcasts (which later used
PAL color). Television broadcasting in the 405-line system continued after the introduction of four analog programs in the UHF bands until the last 405-line transmitters were switched off on January 6, 1985.
VHF Band III was used in other countries around Europe for PAL broadcasts until the planned phase-out and switch over to digital television. The success of analog terrestrial television across Europe varied from country to country. Although each country had rights to a certain number of frequencies by virtue of the ST61 plan, not all of them were brought into service.
Americas The first
National Television System Committee standard was introduced in 1941. This standard defined a transmission scheme for a black-and-white picture with 525 lines of vertical resolution at 60 fields per second. In the early 1950s, this standard was superseded by a backward-compatible standard for
color television. The NTSC standard was exclusively used in the Americas as well as Japan until the
introduction of digital terrestrial television (DTT). While Mexico has ended all its analog television broadcasts and the United States and Canada have shut down nearly all of their analog TV stations, the NTSC standard continues to be used in the rest of Latin American countries except for Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay, where PAL-N standard is used while testing their DTT platform. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, the
Advanced Television Systems Committee developed the
ATSC standard for digital high-definition terrestrial transmission. This standard was eventually adopted by many American countries, including the United States, Canada, Dominican Republic, Mexico, Argentina, El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras; however, the four latter countries reversed their decision in favor of
ISDB-Tb. The Pan-American terrestrial television operates on analog channels 2 through 6 (
VHF-low band, 54 to 88 MHz, known as
band I in Europe), 7 through 13 (VHF-high band, 174 to 216 MHz, known as
band III elsewhere), and 14 through 51 (
UHF television band, 470 to 698 MHz, elsewhere
bands IV and
V). Unlike with analog transmission, ATSC channel numbers do not correspond to radio frequencies. Instead, a
virtual channel is defined as part of the ATSC stream metadata so that a station can transmit on any frequency but still show the same channel number.{{cite book Analog television channels 2 through 6, 7 through 13, and 14 through 51 are only used for
LPTV translator stations in the United States. Channels 52 through 69 are still used by some existing stations, but these channels must be vacated if telecommunications companies notify the stations to vacate that signal spectrum. By convention, broadcast television signals are transmitted with horizontal polarization.
Asia Terrestrial television broadcast in Asia started as early as 1939 in Japan through a series of experiments done by
NHK Broadcasting Institute of Technology. However, these experiments were interrupted by the beginning of
World War II in the Pacific. On February 1, 1953,
NHK (Japan Broadcasting Corporation) began broadcasting. On August 28, 1953,
Nippon TV (Nippon Television Network Corporation), the first commercial television broadcaster in Asia, was launched. Meanwhile, in the Philippines, Alto Broadcasting System (now
ABS-CBN Corporation), the first commercial television broadcaster in
Southeast Asia, launched its first commercial terrestrial television station
DZAQ-TV on October 23, 1953, with the help of
Radio Corporation of America (RCA). ==Digital==