词条 | Channel 37 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
Channel 37 is a purposefully unused ultra-high frequency (UHF) television broadcasting television channel in the United States, Canada and Mexico. The frequency range allocated to this channel is important for radio astronomy, so broadcasting is not licensed. HistoryChannel 37 in System M and N{{clarify|date=September 2018}} countries occupies a band of UHF frequencies from 608 to 614 MHz. This band is particularly important to radio astronomy because it allows observation in a region of the spectrum in between the dedicated frequency allocations near 410 MHz and 1.4 GHz. The area reserved or unused differs from nation to nation and region to region (as for example the EU and British Isles have slightly different reserved frequency areas). One radio astronomy application in this band is for very-long-baseline interferometry.[1] When UHF channels were being allocated in the United States in 1952, channel 37 was assigned to 18 communities across the country. One of them, Valdosta, Georgia, featured the only construction permit ever issued for channel 37: WGOV-TV, owned by Eurith Dickenson "Dee" Rivers Jr., son of the former governor of Georgia (hence the call letters). Rivers received the CP on February 26, 1953, but WGOV-TV never made it to the air; on October 28, 1955 they requested an allocation on channel 8, but the petition was denied.[2] In 1963, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) adopted a 10-year moratorium on any allocation of stations to Channel 37. A new ban on such stations took effect at the beginning of 1974, and was made permanent by a number of later FCC actions. As a result of this, and similar actions by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, Channel 37 has never been used by any over-the-air television station in Canada or the United States. Allocation issuesReservations and use outside the US have a non-exclusive legal status
Since July 2000, Channel 37 may be used in the US for medical telemetry equipment on a co-primary basis.{{clarify|date=September 2018}} This equipment must emit no more than one watt of effective radiated power, and is for use in hospitals and other such facilities.
Channel 1 was also removed from the TV bandplan in the late 1940s, channels 70 to 83 (800 MHz band) by the 1980s mainly for AMPS mobile phones and, in June 2009, channels 52 to 69 (700 MHz band) for mobile phones, emergency services and mobile TV services such as Qualcomm's now-defunct MediaFLO (channel 55). Additional channels from 38 to 51 (600 MHz band) are being taken away from TV broadcasters after FCC auction 1000 ended in early 2017, which will leave channel 37 as a guard band between repacked TV stations and more mobile networks, for which T-Mobile USA won most of the licenses. Certain channels, 14 through 20, are used for land mobile communications in some large metropolitan areas in the U.S. However, facilities using this decades-old co-allocation are treated as just another station to avoid interference to in their local area. The channels displayed by cable converter boxes under these numbers are not on the same frequencies as their over-the-air counterparts; there are also virtual channel numbering schemes in use in digital television which do not map directly to fixed frequency channel assignments. As such, a "cable 37" channel may (and most often does) exist, but on a much lower frequency. Fictional usageChannel 37 is sometimes seen in fiction, the same way telephone numbers with the "555" telephone exchange prefix are used. Channel 37 has been used as a hypothetical example in instruction manuals, where it serves a role analogous to the fictitious example.org and example.net Internet domains and the {{IPaddr|2001:db8}} IP address. Outside North AmericaIn NTSC-M countriesOutside North America, channel 37 is actively used in these countries where NTSC-M is used:
In other countriesIn these other countries, the frequency allocation for these TV channels is different:
Channel 37 is not the same frequency as it is in the countries using the System-M/N standard. At least in the UK, 606–614 MHz is reserved for radio astronomy. The UK's namesake "Channel 37", while different in frequency, was formerly part of a small group of channels reserved for non-broadcast purposes such as RF modulators in video players.[4] The UK-named 34-37 channel range is no longer reserved in this manner. In Japan, UHF television channel frequencies are offset by one channel compared to North American channel naming convention. Japan's channel 36 is in use by TV Asahi in some regions. Global UHF TV allocation table (605–615 MHz)This Radio Astronomy Allocation is between the following wavelengths:
DVB-T adoption note : The tables above are not accurate for nations that have adopted DVB-T. The frequencies for audio and video are merged with DVB terrestrial television. The new DVB frequencies are rounded off to an even number in MHz as a general rule. National arrangements for radio astronomy different from ITU-RNational arrangements for radio astronomy different from ITU-R Radio Regulations Central & Western Europe
Rest of World
References1. ^{{cite web|url=http://sites.nationalacademies.org/xpedio/groups/bpasite/documents/webpage/bpa_048869.pdf |title=Archived copy |accessdate=2010-08-12 |deadurl=no |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120310090720/http://sites.nationalacademies.org/xpedio/groups/bpasite/documents/webpage/bpa_048869.pdf |archivedate=2012-03-10 |df= }} 2. ^History of UHF television: Why Is There No Channel 37? 3. ^[https://barc.bz/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/BELIZE_ITU.pdf Belize National Frequency Spectrum Band Allocation Plan; retrieved February 20, 2019.] 4. ^five analogue reception issues {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080406124750/http://www.tinsleyviaduct.com/phil/channel5.html |date=April 6, 2008 }}, tinsleyviaduct.com External linksNorth America
Rest of World
4 : Broadcast engineering|TV stations by channel number|History of television|Fictional television stations |
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