BBC Used London’s New Year’s Eve Fireworks Show to Test HDR, Says UK's Digital TV Group
BBC Research and Development used London’s New Year's Eve fireworks show to test the capabilities of 4K Ultra HD and high dynamic range (HDR) technology, the U.K.’s Digital TV Group said in its Friday Bulletin email newsletter. BBC engineers worked…
Sign up for a free preview to unlock the rest of this article
Export Compliance Daily combines U.S. export control news, foreign border import regulation and policy developments into a single daily information service that reliably informs its trade professional readers about important current issues affecting their operations.
alongside BBC One to capture the annual fireworks display across the River Thames opposite the London Eye using an HDR camera from the ARRI Group, the largest global supplier of motion picture film equipment, DTG said. HDR “is being developed as part of the move towards Ultra HD to deliver sharper, more colourful pictures, which show a greater range of difference between the brightest and darkest images,” it said. HDR is “quite common in still cameras, which can combine several shots of the same scene, but still in its infancy in cameras which require a new generation of image sensors,” it said. A fireworks show typically is “ideally suited for HDR video as it has a very wide dynamic range, from the dark details of the sky and background at night, to the super bright explosion of the fireworks themselves,” DTG quoted a BBC engineer as saying. “With HDR video we are able to capture and display potentially far more detail than would otherwise be available in a conventional camera, thereby producing significantly more realistic and vivid video, with the aim of maintaining this high level of realism all the way to the home screen." BBC “has been investigating a wide range of technologies that may feature in the next generation of broadcasting, from higher spatial resolution to wider colour gamut,” DTG said. BBC has identified HDR as one of Ultra HD’s “most noticeable improvements,” it said. “Although still under development, HDR is one of the technologies under consideration by the DTG's UK UHD Forum for future Ultra HD industry standards.”