About Compact Disc Audio CD.
The logical format of an audio CD (officially Compact Disc
Digital Audio or CD-DA) is described in a document produced by
the format's joint creators, Sony and Philips in 1980. The
document is known colloquially as the "Red Book" after the color
of its cover. The format is a two-channel 16-bit PCM encoding at
a 44.1 kHz sampling rate per channel. Four-channel sound is an
allowable option within the Red Book format, but has never been
implemented. Monaural audio has no existing standard on a Red
Book CD; mono-source material is usually presented as two
identical channels on a 'stereo' track.
The selection of the sample rate was primarily based on the need
to reproduce the audible frequency range of 20 Hz - 20 kHz. The
Nyquist–Shannon sampling theorem states that a sampling rate of
more than double the maximum frequency of the signal to be
recorded is needed, resulting in a required rate of at least 40
kHz. The exact sampling rate of 44.1 kHz was inherited from a
method of converting digital audio into an analog video signal
for storage on U-matic video tape, which was the most affordable
way to transfer data from the recording studio to the CD
manufacturer at the time the CD specification was being
developed. The device that turns an analog audio signal into PCM
audio, which in turn is changed into an analog video signal is
called a PCM adaptor. This technology could store six samples
(three samples per stereo channel) in a single horizontal line.
A standard NTSC video signal has 245 usable lines per field, and
59.94 fields/s, which works out at 44,056 samples/s/stereo
channel. Similarly, PAL has 294 lines and 50 fields, which gives
44,100 samples/s/stereo channel. This system could either store
14-bit samples with some error correction, or 16-bit samples
with almost no error correction.
There was a long debate over whether to use 14-bit (Philips) or
16-bit (Sony) quantization, and 44,056 or 44,100 samples/s
(Sony) or around 44,000 samples/s (Philips). When the
Sony/Philips task force designed the Compact Disc, Philips had
already developed a 14-bit D/A converter, but Sony insisted on
16-bit. In the end, 16 bits and 44.1 kilosamples per second
prevailed. Philips found a way to produce 16-bit quality using
their 14-bit DAC by using four times oversampling.
Read more about Audio CD.
Source:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Book_(audio_CD_standard)
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Developers.
All the ActiveX components
which served us to develop all of our products are now
proposed for sale. These ActiveX controls can be run under any
environment that supports the
Microsoft ActiveX Technology.
http://www.audioax.com
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