Vectorscope Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
A vectorscope is a special type of oscilloscope used in both audio and video applications.In video applications, a vectorscope supplements a waveform monitor for the purpose of measuring and testing television signals, regardless of format (NTSC or PAL). While a waveform monitor allows a broadcast technician to measure the overall characteristics of a video signal, a vectorscope is used to visualize chrominance, which is encoded into the video signal as a subcarrier of specific frequency. The vectorscope locks exclusively to the color subcarrier in the video signal to drive its display.
A vectorscope uses a circular display, or graticule, for visualizing chrominance signals, which is the best method of referring to the QAM scheme used to encode color into a video signal. Chrominance is measured using two methods—color saturation, encoded as the amplitude, or gain, of the color subcarrier signal, and hue, encoded as the subcarrier's phase. The vectorscope's graticule represents saturation as distance from the center of the circle, and hue as the angle around it. The graticule is also embellished with several elements corresponding to the various components of the standard colorbar video test signal, including boxes around the circles for the colors in the main bars, and perpendicular lines corresponding to the U and V components of the chrominance signal (and additionally on an NTSC vectorscope, the I and Q components). NTSC vectorscopes have one set of boxes for the color bars, while their PAL counterparts have two sets of boxes, due to the fact that chrominance in PAL reverses in phase on alternating lines. The reference signal used for the vectorscope's display is the color burst that is transmitted before each line of video, which is defined to have a phase of 180°, corresponding to the nine-o'clock, or -U, position on the graticule. The actual color burst signal shows up on the vectorscope as a straight line pointing to the left from the center of the graticule.
In audio applications, a vectorscope is used to measure the difference between channels of stereo audio signals. One stereo channel drives the horizontal portion of the display, and the other drives the vertical portion, creating a Lissajous figure.
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