Title :
Comparison of two guided scrambling schemes for optical disks
Author_Institution :
Digital Syst. Dev. Center, Sanyo Electr. Co. Ltd., Tokyo, Japan
fDate :
8/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A guided scrambling (GS) coding technique is practically used to suppress the DC component within a channel bit stream. It is a candidate for a DC-free code in the next generation of the DVD standard. Typically the GS technique uses a convolutional operation or an addition operation in the Galois field (GF). This paper evaluates the performance of the convolutional GS and GF-addition GS on DC-component suppression, symbol error probability, and hardware complexity, and concludes that the GF-addition GS is more suitable for the next generation of the DVD standard than the convolutional GS with respect to the symbol error probability.
Keywords :
Galois fields; code standards; convolutional codes; error statistics; optical disc storage; signal processing; video recording; DC-component suppression; DC-free code; GF; GS technique; Galois field; addition operation; channel bit stream; convolutional operation; digital signal recording; digital versatile disk; guided scrambling coding; hardware complexity; next generation DVD standard; optical disks; performance evaluation; symbol error probability; Code standards; Convolution; Convolutional codes; DVD; Decoding; Digital recording; Digital systems; Disk recording; Error probability; Hardware;
Journal_Title :
Consumer Electronics, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TCE.2002.1037045