Apparatus for the display of pictures having an aspect ratio 4/3 on a display having an aspect ratio of 16/9

A picture display apparatus adapted to pictures having an aspect ratio 16/9, permitting the simultaneous control of the line length and the vertical spacing of the lines. For the reception of pictures having an aspect ratio 4/3, the two control circuits are coupled in such a manner that the length of the lines of the displayed picture is decreased (2, 20) when the vertical spacing of the lines is normal or that the length of the lines of the displayed picture is normal when the vertical spacing between the lines is increased (3, 6). In addition, the control circuits are a continuously variable type, and access of the user to the control circuits is effected by remote control.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
The present invention relates to a picture display apparatus producing 
pictures by means of a sequence of lines, provided with user-accessible 
means for the simultaneous control of the line length and the vertical 
spacing between the lines. 
Such an apparatus is, for example, a television receiver or a television 
monitor. 
An apparatus of this type is disclosed in the U.S. Pat. No. 2,510,670 
(Barnet S. Trott), which describes a television set having means for 
increasing the vertical amplitude and the horizontal amplitude together 
and in the same ratio so as to create a so-called "zoom" effect. 
This apparatus does however not solve a different problem, namely the 
problem that: there are now television receivers on the market designed 
for receiving pictures whose width/height ratio, denoted aspect ratio, is 
16/9. These pictures are transmitted more specifically by television 
satellites. In contrast thereto, the majority of television transmissions 
nowadays have an aspect ratio of 4/3. 
When the reception of a picture having an aspect ratio of 4/3 on a 
television receiver having an aspect ratio of 16/9 is involved, it is 
sufficient to take measures to reestablish the correct aspect ratio of the 
picture and in addition the user wants to have the option to choose 
between the loss of a portion of the received picture or the fact that he 
cannot use the entire surface of the screen; this will be described in 
greater detail hereinafter with reference to the Figures. In high-gamma 
receivers, having an aspect ratio of 16/9 or an aspect ratio of 4/3, 
provided with picture stores allowing complex digital processing of the 
pictures, the pictures can be manipulated at will in order to solve all 
the above-mentioned problems. 
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
The invention has for its object to provide generally a solution to this 
type of problems of standard television receivers without pictures stores 
or means for processing complex pictures. 
To this effect, an apparatus according to the invention, is characterized 
in that, the apparatus being adapted to pictures having an aspect ratio of 
4/3, in such a manner that the line length of the displayed picture is 
normal when the vertical spacing between the lines is increased, or that 
the line length of the displayed picture is decreased when the vertical 
spacing between the lines is normal, the said means for controlling the 
line length of the displayed pictured being dimensioned to render it 
possible to obtain at least two line length values which are in a mutual 
relationship of 1.33 and the said means for controlling the vertical 
spacing of the lines being dimensioned to obtain at least two 
corresponding line spacing values which are in a mutually inverse ratio. A 
"normal" spacing must here be understood to mean a spacing in which the 
amplitude of the lines which allows a coverage of the dimension of the 
screen with the lines such as they are defined at the transmission end. 
During the television transmission of a "Cinemascope" movie picture in a 
foreign language and an original version, the sub-titles must be placed 
outside the actual picture (of the cinema film). In that case, if the 
highest possible picture is opted for, the sub-titles are hidden from 
view. If contrary thereto the entire 4/3 picture is chosen, it is much too 
small. 
To avoid this drawback, an apparatus according to the invention, is 
characterized in that, the said control means are of a continuously 
variable type whose variation control is accessible to the user of the 
television set. 
In this manner a picture of an intermediate dimension can be obtained, 
which renders the sub-titles visible but is nevertheless larger than a 
complete picture. 
To increase the ease of handling by the user, an apparatus according to the 
invention is advantageously provided with means to allow access of the 
user to the said control means via remote control. 
In an advantageous embodiment, the apparatus, provided with a cathoderay 
tube, includes a line scanning circuit of the diode modulator type, having 
a parabola generator for an east-west correction, and means for acting on 
the average d.c voltage of the parabolas in the parabola generator 
circuit, for the control of the horizontal amplitude. 
The apparatus, which forms pictures with the aid of a cathode-ray tube, 
using a field frequency sawtooth current generator which comprises an 
amplifier for injecting said sawtooth current into a beam deflection coil, 
a negative feedback being applied to this amplifier, is advantageously 
provided with means for having the raising edge of this negative feedback 
vary so as to adjust the spacing between the lines, and it furthermore 
includes means for cutting-off those portions of the vertical scanning 
sawtooth that would produce picture elements beyond the screen. 
As the apparatus is provided with a microprocessor for managing the control 
of the line and field scans, and the two limits desired for the amplitudes 
being adjusted accurately by means of the microprocessor, the said 
user-accessible control means have a setting range extending between these 
two limits. 
In addition, the apparatus having a video circuit which produces a voltage 
drop for suppressing the luminance during the line retraces, it is 
advantageously provided with means for having the said drop start from the 
instant at which a video information is no longer present at the end of a 
line, and to have this drop continue as least until a video information is 
present again at the start of the next line.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION 
The following description relates to the case in which a picture having an 
aspect ratio of 4/3 is displayed on a receiver set having a 16/9 screen. 
The basic principle of the invention is not so suitable for the opposite 
case, i.e. the case in which a picture received with an aspect ratio 16/9 
is received on a receiver having a size 4/3, as then the line amplitude 
must be increased to beyond the normal, which cannot easily be done. One 
of the merits of the invention is that this problem does not occur for the 
case of a picture received with an aspect ratio 4/3 for display on a 16/9 
receiver set. 
In FIG. 1, reference numerals 1 and 10 denote the lateral edges of the 
screen of a receiver for 16/9 pictures. The reference numerals 2 and 20 
denote the lateral edges of a picture having an aspect ratio 4/3, such as 
they can be shown on the screen when one wants to observe it in its 
totality. A portion of the screen, indicated by hatched portions, is not 
used. 
In FIG. 2 the same picture is represented as it would be seen if a 16/9 
receiver were used without special precautions while tuning its tuner to a 
or SECAM transmission with a picture having an aspect ratio 4/3. The 
useful duration of a or a SECAM line and the field period are the same 
as those used for the line and the field having an aspect ratio 16/9, and 
the picture shown thus occupies the entire screen. It should be noted, 
particularly when comparing the ball 4 to the ball in FIG. 1, that the 
picture is deformed due to horizontal extension. 
In FIG. 3, the references D and F denote the respective top and bottom 
limits of the screen for receiving 16/9 pictures. A picture received with 
an aspect ratio 4/3 is represented thus when one wants to have the largest 
possible picture. Reference numerals 3 and 6 denote the top and bottom 
limits of the 4/3 pictures, which are then beyond the screen. The lateral 
edges of the picture are in alignment with those of the screen but the 
picture portions between the limits 3 and D on the one hand and between 
the limits F and 6 on the other hand are lost. 
When an apparatus having a picture store is used, the situation shown in 
FIG. 1 is obtained by storing the received picture in such a store, 
without displaying it, displaying it thereafter by reading the store 
again, starting the reading operation at each line in the store with a 
delay relative to the start of the line scan on the screen, so that the 
reproduced picture only starts at 2, and at such a rate that the end of 
reading the line occurs at 20 before the right-hand edge of the screen is 
reached. 
The situation shown in FIG. 3 is obtained for this same apparatus by 
starting the store reading operation from an address corresponding to the 
line D of the received picture, and by ending at the line corresponding to 
the line F of the received picture. Measures must possibly be taken to 
generate additional lines so as to have the disposal of a number of lines 
equal to the number of lines of the screen between the lines D and F. 
In accordance with the invention, the situation shown in FIG. 1 is obtained 
by reducing the amplitude of the horizontal scanning of the cathode-ray 
tube, while the amplitude of the vertical deflection is kept normal. The 
situation shown in FIG. 3 is obtained by increasing the amplitude of the 
vertical scan of the cathode-ray tube, that is to say the spacing between 
the lines, whereas the amplitude of the horizontal deflection is kept 
normal. 
The horizontal amplitude and the vertical amplitude are denoted by DH and 
AV, respectively, and DH and AV are assumed to have a value 1 for the 
normal scanning of the 16/9 screen. 
The control means for controlling the vertical spacing between the lines 
and the lengths of the lines of the reproduced picture are both 
dimensioned such that two spacing values AV of the lines are obtained, 
namely 1.333 and 1, which are in a mutual relationship equal to the ratio 
between the said two aspect ratios, and two line length values DH, namely 
1 and 0.75, which are in the same mutual ratio (1 divided by 0.75 is 
1.333). Actually, the ratio between the aspect ratios is 16/9 divided by 
4/3, i.e. a ratio of 4/3 or 1.333. 
These two control means are coupled to provide that they act in unison; so 
for the case shown in FIG. 1 it is obtained that: DH=0.75 and AV=1, and 
for the case shown in FIG. 3 the two values of DH and AV are modified 
together, resulting in: DH=1 and AV=1.333. 
The user of the apparatus has direct access to the control means, and he 
himself can therefore chose the situation he wants. 
The control means are moreover of a continuously variable type, so that all 
the intermediate situations between the situations shown in FIG. 1 and 
FIG. 3 can also be obtained. Access to such a control is preferably 
effected by means of the remote control of the apparatus, which has one or 
a plurality of push buttons for that purpose. 
FIG. 4 shows the advantage of such a feature: FIG. 4A illustrates the same 
situation as in FIG. 1, for the case in which the current transmission is 
a "Cinemascope" film. The right-hand edge of the picture received with an 
aspect ratio of 4/3 is always indicated by reference numeral 2, but the 
top and bottom edges of the useful picture, that of the film, denoted by 
reference numerals 7 and 8, leave a portion of the screen unused above and 
below the picture. A zone 9 is provided for sub-titles, if any. 
It will be obvious that in the situation of FIG. 3, the sub-titles would be 
at the exterior of the screen. The situation of FIG. 4B which corresponds 
to an intermediate dimension of the line length and the line spacing 
render it possible to obtain a larger picture than shown in FIG. 4A while 
maintaining the zone 9 for visible sub-titles. 
The vertical scanning stage, whose block circuit diagram is shown in FIG. 
5, comprises an oscillator 18 which is synchronized by a synchronizing 
signal applied to an input S, and whose free oscillation frequency is 
controlled by a variable resistor 13, followed by a ramp generator 12 
which supplies sawtooth signals to a "+" input of an output amplifier 15, 
which amplifier finally applies a deflection current to a field deflection 
coil 16. This coil is connected to ground via a current measuring resistor 
17 and the signal taken from the point 38 is applied to a "-" input of the 
amplifier 15, to create a negative feedback, as well as to an input 19 of 
the ramp generator 12, via a variable resistor 14, in order to create 
there an adjustable nonlinearity in the shape of an "S" required by the 
system. All this is known to a person skilled in the art. 
In an apparatus in accordance with the invention, a field-effect transistor 
(FET) 11 is incorporated which has its drain-source space connected in 
parallel with the resistor 17. This transistor is controlled by a control 
voltage C applied to its grid. As is known, the drain-source space of a 
field-effect transistor behaves as a controllable resistance and this 
resistance is arranged in parallel with the resistor 17: thus the voltage 
generated at the point 18 by a given current in the deflection coil is 
variable as a function of the control voltage C, and consequently the 
negative feedback is modified which acts on the amplitude of the 
deflection current. A low-power FET transistor is sufficient, for example 
the transistor marketed under the type designation "Jedec" BF256. 
The supply voltage of the circuit of FIG. 5 may be decreased to the minimum 
just required to allow the entire vertical scanning of the screen. Thus 
those portions of the vertical scanning sawtooth which might result in 
picture elements outside the screen at certain settings of the gain of the 
amplifier are cut-off, the signal then having the shape shown in FIG. 5 
below the resistor 14. 
The apparatus is provided in a manner known per se with a line scanning 
circuit of the "diode modulator" type. Such a circuit is designed to 
enable a dynamic horizontal amplitude control, that is to say an amplitude 
which varies during the same field, without affecting the voltages 
generated from the line scanning circuit onwards. In this manner one can 
have the amplitude vary in a parabolic manner during the duration of a 
field to apply a known correction, the so-called east-west correction. The 
known "diode modulator" circuits are therefore provided with a connection 
terminal for an amplitude control signal. 
The voltage intended to be applied to this control terminal for thus having 
the amplitude vary, is generated by a circuit of which an embodiment is 
shown in FIG. 6. Applied to an input Pi is a signal in the shape of a 
parabola which is generated in known manner. This signal is transmitted 
via a capacitor 21 and three series-arranged resistors 22, 23, 24 to the 
input of an amplifier 31, whose output terminal Po is connected to the 
said connection terminal for a control signal for the amplitude of the 
diode modulator (not shown). The resistor 22 is adjustable to allow the 
control of the amplitude of the parabolas. A capacitor 25 connects the 
junction point of the resistors 22 and 23 to ground. A negative feedback 
is obtained by means of the two resistors 27 and 28 which are arranged in 
series between the output of the amplifier (which produces a 180.degree. 
phase shift of the signal) and its input. The junction point of these two 
resistors is connected to ground via a capacitor 32 so as to provide that 
the negative feedback only occurs for direct current. 
The input of the amplifier is further connected to the intermediate tap of 
a voltage divider bridge which is formed from two resistors 29 and 33 one 
of which is variable, and is placed between ground and a "-26 V" terminal 
connected to a voltage source, not shown. The variable resistor has for 
its object to allow a control of the d.c. level of the output signal of 
the amplifier, since it is one of the elements which define the value of 
the negative feedback. All this is known to a person skilled in the art. 
An apparatus in accordance with the invention, is provided with a 
field-effect transistor (FET) 30 which has its drain-source space 
connected in parallel with the resistor 33. This transistor performs the 
function of a variable resistance and its grid is controlled by the 
control voltage C. 
The apparatus is provided with a micro-processor which more specifically 
manages the commands given by the user via his remote control unit. The 
control voltage C, which is common to the two configurations of FIGS. 5 
and 6, is produced with the aid of this micro-processor in response to a 
remote control command. This may, for example, be obtained by programming 
the micro-processor such that it generates a signal whose form factor 
varies as a function of the desired aspect ratio. This signal, which is 
transmitted via a capacitor, thereafter aligned with ground so as to fix 
its highest portion at zero volt, and finally integrated, thus supplies a 
variable negative d.c. voltage suitable to control the grid of the 
field-effect transistors 11 and 30. 
The micro-processor is then also used to manage the control of the line and 
field scanning amplitudes. During the manufacture of the apparatus, the 
control procedure includes a stage in which the micro-processor stores the 
values, which slightly differ from apparatus to apparatus, of the form 
factor to be generated to obtain the two desired limits for the 
amplitudes. These amplitudes can thus be accurately controlled by the 
micro-processor (by means of the relevant stored values). From there the 
control range of the said user-accessible control means extends between 
the said two limits. 
Different manners of realizing the control are conceivable. For example, 
instead of generating the voltage by integration of a variable form signal 
a digital-to-analog converter might be used. For the case of the circuit 
shown in FIG. 6, one might alternatively use, instead of a FET transistor, 
a digitally programmable source as the "-26 V" voltage source which might 
be adjusted in an adequate range around -26 volts. 
In prior art television sets which do not include picture processing means 
based on picture stores, scanning of the screen is synchronized with the 
sending of video information components by the transmitter, and the line 
scan is controlled with such an amplitude that the reproduced lines 
slightly overflow to beyond the screen, more specifically for rendering a 
"sparking" effect in the region of the vertical edges of the picture 
invisible by pushing them from the screen, which effect is due to the fact 
that the receiver tries to identify video signals while they are no longer 
present in the received signal. When the picture is displayed as shown in 
FIG. 1, the vertical edges of the picture and the fault are visible. When 
a television set is used having picture processing means based on picture 
stores, there is no such problem as only the useful picture elements 
entered into the store are reproduced. In an apparatus in accordance with 
the invention, provided with a video circuit supplying a voltage drop for 
blanking the luminance during the line retraces, this fault is obviated 
because the apparatus is provided with means for having the said drop 
start as soon as a video information is no longer present at the end of a 
line, and for having said drop continue until at least a video information 
is again present at the beginning of the next line. When the apparatus 
includes a clock circuit comprising a master clock having a frequency 
which is a multiple of the line frequency and the frequency of the 
chrominance subcarrier, which circuit supplies different synchronizing 
peaks by counting clock periods, these means can easily be realized by 
marking the suitable counting instants of the clock circuit. 
Moreover, account must be taken of the fact that when the picture differs 
from that shown in FIG. 2, its surface is different while its scanning 
period is the same, and consequently the brightness will be different when 
no special precautions are taken. For the case shown in FIG. 1, the 
picture is smaller and therefore brighter, while for the case illustrated 
in FIG. 3, the opposite occurs. 
In order to correct these brightness deviations, the variable control 
signal of the aspect ratio is also utilized to act on the video amplifying 
circuit, so as to change the amplitude of the signal applied to the 
cathode-ray tube. 
The video circuits may, for example, be of the type described in the patent 
application EP-A-0 375 038 filed by Applicants, to which reference can be 
had for further details. These video circuits ensure, inter alia, a 
preamplification of the video signals with a controllable gain by means of 
a variable control voltage, with the object of changing the contrast of 
the picture, the television set being on the other hand provided with a 
control circuit for the contrast which comprises a comparison device for 
comparing the peak value of the video signal to a reference threshold, the 
signal obtained when this threshold is exceeded being applied, after 
integration, to a manually operated contrast control device supplying a 
further control signal, depending on the user, and which is also utilized 
for the control of the controllable preamplifying gain. The nominal gain 
of the amplification of the signal being sufficiently high to provide, for 
the majority of the pictures received, that the peak values of the video 
signal (of each of the video signals R, G, B) reach the said reference 
value, this reference value is adjustable as a function of the contrast 
command issued by the user, which variation of the threshold ultimately 
constitutes the manual control device of the contrast. 
With such a circuit, the correction as a function of the aspect ratio of 
the picture is applied such that the reference threshold is changed. A 
person skilled in the art can easily conceive means for adding, with the 
desired weighting, the variable aspect ratio control signal to the 
user-dependent contrast control signal.