Nowadays, ETSI Satellite Digital Radio is a topic that arouses the interest of many people around the world. Over time, ETSI Satellite Digital Radio has acquired great relevance in various fields, from politics to science, including culture and society in general. Its impact has been so significant that it has generated debates, controversies and deep reflections among experts and ordinary citizens alike. In this article, we will analyze the role that ETSI Satellite Digital Radio currently plays and explore its implications in different contexts.
ETSI Satellite Digital Radio (SDR or ETSI SDR) describes a standard of satellite digital radio. It is an activity of the European standardisation organisation ETSI.
It addresses systems where a satellite broadcast directly to mobile and handheld receivers in L band or S band and is complemented by terrestrial transmitters. The broadcast content consists of multicast audio (digital radio), video (mobile TV) and data (program guide, text and graphical information, as well as off-line content). The satellite component allows geographical coverage at low cost, whereas the terrestrial component improves reception quality in built up areas. The specifications considers conditional access and digital rights management.[1]
1worldspace planned to use ETSI SDR in its new network covering Europe from 2009, but the company went defunct before it launched its service.[2] Also Ondas Media has announced to use ETSI SDR.[3]
The ETSI SDR is also similar to the Sirius XM Radio, the S-DMB used in South Korea for multimedia broadcasting since May 2005, the China Multimedia Mobile Broadcasting (CMMB) and the defunct MobaHo! service (2004-2009). The DVB-SH specifications, which the DVB Project has created, target similar broadcast systems as ETSI SDR.
The ETSI SDR standard allows implementation of parts of such networks in an interoperable way. So far, ETSI has standardized the physical layer of the air interface (radio interface). This allows implementation of demodulators in integrated circuits. The physical layer is described by the following parts of ETSI EN 302 550:
These three parts replace the previous ETSI SDR standards ETSI TS 102 550, ETSI TS 102 551-1 and ETSI TS 102 551-2.
The following technical report contains guidelines for the use of these standards:
The following technical report describes the facts and assumptions on which the SDR standards are based:
Note that in this document the word "may" replaces the word "shall" due to a decision of the ETSI Board in June 2006.
All ETSI specifications are open standards available at ETSI Publications Download Area (this will open ETSI document search engine; free registration is required to download PDF files).