Everything about Ac3 totally explained
Dolby Digital is the marketing name for a series of
lossy audio compression technologies developed by
Dolby Laboratories.
Versions
Dolby
Digital includes several similar technologies, which include Dolby Digital, Dolby Digital EX, Dolby Digital Live, Dolby Digital Surround EX, Dolby Digital Plus, and Dolby TrueHD.
Dolby Digital
Dolby Digital, or
AC-3, is the common version containing up to six discrete channels of sound, with five channels for normal-range speakers (20 Hz – 20,000 Hz) (right front, center, left front, right rear and left rear) and one channel (20 Hz – 120 Hz) for the
subwoofer driven
low-frequency effects.
Mono and
stereo modes are also supported. AC-3 supports audio sample-rates up to 48kHz.
Batman Returns was the first film to use Dolby Digital technology when it premiered in theaters in Summer 1992. The LaserDisc version of
Clear and Present Danger featured the very first
Home theater Dolby Digital mix in 1995.
This
codec has several aliases, which are different names for the same codec:
- Dolby Digital (promotional name, not accepted by the ATSC)
- DD (an abbreviation of above, often combined with channel count: DD 5.1)
- Dolby Surround AC-3 Digital (second promotional name, as seen on early film releases and on home audio equipment until about 1995/1996)
- Dolby Stereo Digital (first promotional name, as seen on early releases, also seen on True Lies LaserDisc)
- Dolby SR-Digital (when the recording incorporates a Dolby SR-format recording for compatibility)
- SR-D (an abbreviation of above)
- Adaptive Transform Coder 3 (relates to the bitstream format of Dolby Digital)
- AC-3 (an abbreviation of above)
- Audio Codec 3, Advanced Codec 3, Acoustic Coder 3 (These are backronyms. However, Adaptive TRansform Acoustic Coding 3, or ATRAC3, is a separate format developed by Sony)
- ATSC A/52 (name of the standard, current version is A/52 Rev. B)
Dolby Digital EX
Dolby Digital EX is similar in practice to Dolby's earlier
Pro-Logic format, which utilized
Matrix technology to add a center and single rear surround channel to stereo soundtracks. EX adds an extension to the standard 5.1 channel Dolby Digital codec in the form of matrixed rear channels, creating 6.1 or 7.1 channel output. However, the format isn't considered a true 6.1 or 7.1 channel codec because it lacks the capability to support a discrete 6th channel unlike the competing
DTS-ES codec.
Dolby Digital Live
Dolby Digital Live (DDL) is a real-time encoding technology for interactive media such as
video games. It converts any audio signals on a
PC or
game console into the 5.1-channel Dolby Digital format and transports it via a single
S/PDIF cable. A similar technology known as DTS Connect is available from competitor
DTS.
Dolby Digital Live is currently available in
sound cards from manufacturers such as
Turtle Beach,
HT OMEGA SYSTEM,
Auzentech and
Asus using
C-Media chipsets. The
SoundStorm, used for the
Xbox game console and certain
nForce2-based PCs, used an early form of this technology.
DDL is also available on motherboards with codecs such as
Realtek's ALC882D, ALC888DD and ALC888H.
DDL is also supported by all
Creative X-Fi based sound cards, but is intentionally disabled in the drivers by Creative on all but the Auzentech Prelude. A programmer by the name daniel_k has fixed these drivers in Windows Vista by un-crippling DDL and fixing other bugs and has subsequently been censored and censured by Creative for doing so.
An important benefit of this technology is that it enables the use of digital multichannel sound with consumer sound cards, which are otherwise limited to PCM stereo or multichannel analog.
Dolby Digital Surround EX
Dolby Digital Surround EX was co-developed by
Dolby and
Lucasfilm THX in time for the release in May 1999 of . It provides an economical and backwards-compatible means for 5.1 soundtracks to carry a sixth, center back surround channel for improved localization of effects. The extra surround channel is matrix encoded onto the discrete Left Surround and Right Surround channels of the 5.1 mix, much like the front center channel on Dolby Surround encoded stereo soundtracks. The result can be played without loss of information on standard 5.1 systems, or played in 6.1 or 7.1 on systems equipped with Surround EX decoding and additional speakers.
Dolby Digital Surround EX has since been used for the
Star Wars prequels on the DVD versions and also the remastered original Star Wars trilogy. A number of DVDs have Dolby Digital Surround EX audio option.
Dolby Digital Plus
E-AC-3, more commonly known as
Dolby Digital Plus, is an enhanced coding system based on the AC-3 codec. It offers increased bitrates (up to 6.144 Mbit/s), support for more audio channels (up to 13.1), improved coding techniques to reduce
compression artifacts, and backward compatibility with existing AC-3 hardware.
Dolby TrueHD
Dolby TrueHD, developed by Dolby Laboratories, is an advanced lossless audio codec based on
Meridian Lossless Packing. Support for the codec is mandatory for HD DVD and optional for
Blu-ray Disc hardware. TrueHD supports 24 bit, 96 kHz audio channels at up to 18 Mbit/s over 14 channels (HD DVD and Blu-ray Disc standards currently limit the maximum number of audio channels to eight). It also supports extensive metadata, including dialog normalization and Dynamic Range Control.
Channel configurations
Although most commonly associated with the 5.1 channel configuration, Dolby Digital allows a number of different channel selections. The full list of available options is:
Mono (Center only)
2-channel stereo (Left + Right), optionally carrying matrixed Dolby Surround
3-channel stereo (Left, Center, Right)
2-channel stereo with mono surround (Left, Right, Surround)
3-channel stereo with mono surround (Left, Center, Right, Surround)
4-channel quadrophonic (Left, Right, Left Surround, Right Surround)
5-channel surround (Left, Center, Right, Left Surround, Right Surround)
All of these configurations can optionally include the extra Low Frequency Effect (LFE) channel. The last two with stereo surrounds can optionally use Dolby Digital EX matrix encoding to add an extra Rear Surround channel.
Many Dolby Digital decoders are equipped with downmixing functionality to distribute encoded channels to available speakers. This includes such functions as playing surround information through the front speakers if surround speakers are unavailable, and distributing the center channel to left and right if no center speaker is available. When outputting to separate equipment over a 2-channel connection, a Dolby Digital decoder can optionally encode the output using Dolby Surround to preserve surround information.
The '.1' in 5.1, 7.1 etc. refers to the LFE channel, which is also a discrete channel.
Applications of Dolby Digital
Dolby Digital SR-D cinema soundtracks are optically recorded on a 35 mm release print using sequential data blocks placed between every perforation hole on the sound track side of the film.
A CCD scanner in the projector picks up a scanned video image of this area, and a processor correlates the image area and extracts the digital data as an AC-3 bitstream.
These data are finally decoded into a 5.1 channel audio source.
Dolby Digital audio is also used on DVD-Video and other purely digital media, like home cinema.
In this format, the AC-3 bitstream is interleaved with the video and control bitstreams.
The system is used in many bandwidth-limited applications other than DVD-Video, such as digital TV. The AC-3 standard allows a maximum coded bit rate of 640 kbit/s. 35 mm film prints use a fixed rate of 320 kbit/s. HD-DVD and DVD-Video discs are limited to 448 kbit/s, although many players can successfully play higher-rate bitstreams (which are non-compliant with the DVD specification). ATSC and Digital cable standards limit AC-3 to 448 kbit/s. Blu-ray Disc, the Sony PlayStation 3 and the Microsoft Xbox game console can output an AC-3 signal at a full 640 kbit/s. Some Sony PlayStation 2 console games are also capable to output AC-3 standard audio as well.
Dolby is also part of a group of organizations involved in the development of AAC (Advanced Audio Coding), part of MPEG specifications, and considered the successor to MP3. AAC outperforms AC-3 at any bitrate, but is more complex.
Dolby Digital Plus (DD-Plus) is supported in HD DVD, as a mandatory codec, and in Blu-ray Disc, as an optional codec.
Dolby Technologies in packaged media formats
|
HD DVD |
Blu-ray |
DVD |
DVD-Audio |
Laserdisc |
| Codec |
Player support |
Channels (max) |
Max Bit Rate |
Player support |
Channels (max) |
Max Bit Rate |
Player support |
Channels (max) |
Max Bit Rate |
Player support |
Channels (max) |
Max Bit Rate |
Player support |
Channels (max) |
Max Bit Rate |
| Dolby Digital |
Mandatory |
5.1 |
504 kbit/s |
Mandatory |
5.1 |
640 kbit/s |
Mandatory |
5.1 |
448 kbit/s |
Optional in video zone for playback compatibility on DVD-Video players |
5.1 |
448 kbit/s |
Optional |
5.1 |
384 kbit/s |
| Dolby Digital Plus |
7.1 |
3 Mbit/s |
Optional |
7.1 |
1.7 Mbit/s |
N/A |
| Dolby TrueHD |
8 |
18 Mbit/s |
8 |
18 Mbit/s |
Technical details
The data layout of AC-3 is described by simplified "C-like" language in official specifications. An AC-3 stream is made up by a series of synchronization frames, which are composed of six audio blocks. Each audio block contains 256 audio samples per channel. Note 6×256 = 1536 = Audio frame size. Below is a simplified AC-3 header intended to give an introduction into the data syntax. A detailed description of the header can be found in the ATSC "Digital Audio Compression (AC-3) Standard"
, section 5.4.
| Field Name |
# of bits |
Description |
| syncword | 16 |
0x0B77 Transmission of data is left bit first also known as Big Endian.
|
| CRC | 16 |
|
| Sampling frequency | 2 |
'11'=reserved '10'=32 kHz '01'=44.1 '00'=48
|
| Frame Size Code | 6 |
|
| Bit Stream Identification | 5 |
|
| Bit Stream Mode | 3 |
'000'=main audio service
|
| Audio Coding Mode | 3 |
'010'=left, right channel ordering
|
| Center Mix level | 2 |
|
| Surround Mix Level | 2 |
|
| Dolby Surround Mode | 2 |
'00'=not indicated '01'=Not surround encoded '10'=Yes, surround encoded.
|
Further Information
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