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providing in very deep explaination with examples

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Junior / 11th Grade
Course
Mathematics

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Deep explanation of broadcasting —
thoroughly, with examples
Great — here’s a deep, structured walkthrough of what broadcasting is, how it works (both
analog and digital), the technical pieces, standards, regulatory bits, common use-cases, and
concrete, worked examples you can follow or compute yourself.




1) What broadcasting means (short definition)
Broadcasting is the one-to-many distribution of audio and/or audiovisual content to a
dispersed audience using an electronic mass-communication medium (often radio waves or
IP networks). It’s the classic model where one origin (studio, server) sends a signal that many
receivers can consume. (Wikipedia)




2) Two big families: terrestrial/radio/TV vs IP/internet
broadcasting
Traditional (over-the-air) broadcasting

 Uses the electromagnetic spectrum (AM/FM radio, VHF/UHF TV, satellite). One
transmitter (or network of transmitters) radiates signals; many receivers tune in.
Examples: AM news radio, FM music radio, terrestrial TV. (Wikipedia)

Digital/Internet broadcasting

 Uses packet networks: streaming servers, CDNs, adaptive bitrate (HLS/DASH).
Receivers request streams (often unicast), though multicast is used inside networks.
Examples: live Twitch stream, Netflix (on-demand), IPTV services. (See later section
for multicast vs unicast.)

Hybrid: Many broadcasters now simulcast over both RF (digital terrestrial/satellite) and IP
(streaming). Standards like DVB define digital transmission formats for
terrestrial/satellite/cable. (Wikipedia)




3) Core transmission chain (what happens end-to-end)
1. Content capture — cameras/mics, mixer/console, graphics, replays.
2. Production/Encoding — switcher, encoder (compresses audio/video using codecs
like H.264/H.265 for video, AAC/MP3 for audio).

, 3. Multiplexing & Packaging — for digital broadcasting: audio+video+metadata inside
a transport stream (e.g., MPEG-TS); for IP: fragmented segments (HLS/DASH).
4. Modulation & Transmission — convert baseband signal to RF using modulators
(AM, FM, QAM, OFDM, etc.), amplify, feed to antenna/satellite uplink or push to
CDN/RTMP server.
5. Propagation — RF waves travel (subject to line-of-sight, terrain, atmosphere), or
packets traverse the internet.
6. Reception & Decoding — tuner/receiver or media player decodes the stream and
plays it. (ScienceDirect)




4) Key technologies & standards (high-level)
 Radio: AM (amplitude modulation), FM (frequency modulation), DAB (Digital
Audio Broadcasting), DRM (Digital Radio Mondiale). (Wikipedia)
 TV (digital): DVB family (DVB-T/T2 terrestrial, DVB-S/S2 satellite, DVB-C cable),
ATSC (used in US), ISDB (Japan/parts of Latin America). DVB-T2 is the modern
terrestrial standard offering higher capacity and robustness than DVB-T. (Wikipedia)
 IP streaming: RTMP, RTSP (ingest), HLS / MPEG-DASH (delivery), CDN +
adaptive bitrate.
 Modulation & multiplexing: OFDM/COFDM, QAM, PSK depending on medium
and standard. (Wikipedia)




5) Important physical propagation concept (radio horizon)
— formula + worked example
For terrestrial VHF/UHF broadcasts, a simple approximation for the radio horizon (best-case
max line-of-sight distance) is:

[
\text{horizon}_{\text{km}} \approx 3.57 \times \sqrt{\text{height (m)}}
]

This is a standard approximate formula used for estimating best-case range. (Wikipedia)

Worked numeric example (antenna height = 30 m):

 Step 1: compute (\sqrt{30}).
(\sqrt{30} \approx 5.477225575051661).
 Step 2: multiply by 3.57.
(3.57\times 5.477225575051661 =)
(3\times5.477225575051661 = 16.431676725154983)
(0.57\times5.477225575051661 \approx 3.122018567779447)
Sum (=16.431676725154983 + 3.122018567779447 \approx 19.55369529293443).
 So the approximate radio horizon ≈ 19.55 km.

Written for

Institution
Junior / 11th grade
Course
Mathematics
School year
2

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Uploaded on
November 15, 2025
Number of pages
5
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Class notes
Professor(s)
Lokesh uadhayay
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All classes

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