HDR10+
HDR10+[1] is a high dynamic range (HDR) video technology that adds dynamic metadata[2] to HDR10 source files. The dynamic metadata are used to adjust and optimize each frame of the HDR video to the consumer display's capabilities in a way based on the content creator's intents.
HDR10+ is a competitor to Dolby Vision, which also uses dynamic metadata.[3] HDR10+ is the default variant of dynamic metadata as part of the HDMI 2.1 standard.[4]
HDR10+ Adaptive is an update designed to optimize HDR10+ content according to the ambient light.[5]
Description[]
HDR10+, also known as HDR10 Plus, was announced on 20 April 2017, by Samsung and Amazon Video. HDR10+ updates HDR10 by adding dynamic metadata that can be used to more accurately adjust brightness levels up to 10,000 nits maximum brightness on a scene-by-scene or frame-by-frame basis and supports up to 10-bit colour depth and 8K resolution.[6][7][8][9] This function is based on Samsung application SMPTE ST 2094-40 Application #4.[10][11][12][7][8][9] HDR10+ is an open standard and is royalty-free; it is supported by Colorfront's Transkoder and MulticoreWare's x265.[7][8][9] A certification and logo program for HDR10+ device manufacturers will be made available with an annual administration fee and no per unit royalty.[13] An authorized test center conducts a certification program for HDR10+ devices.[13]
On 28 August 2017, Samsung, Panasonic, and 20th Century Fox created the HDR10+ Alliance[14] to promote the HDR10+ standard.[15] HDR10+ video started being offered by Amazon Video on 13 December 2017.[16] On 5 January 2018, Warner Bros. announced their support for the HDR10+ standard.[17] On 6 January 2018, Panasonic announced Ultra HD Blu-ray players with support for HDR10+.[18] On 4 April 2019, Universal Pictures Home Entertainment announced a technology collaboration with Samsung Electronics to release new titles mastered with HDR10+.[19] It is considered to have most of the advantages of Dolby Vision over HDR10, despite being fee free.[20]
HDR10+ signals the dynamic range and scene characteristics on a scene-by-scene or even frame-by-frame basis. The display device then uses the dynamic metadata to apply an appropriate tone map through the process of dynamic tone mapping.[21] Dynamic tone mapping differs from static tone mapping by applying a different tone curve from scene-to-scene rather than use a single tone curve for an entire video.[22]
HDR10+ and Dolby Vision do not use the same dynamic metadata.
Technical details[]
HDR10+ content profile[]
- EOTF: SMPTE ST 2084 (PQ)
- Chroma subsampling: 4:2:0 (for compressed video sources)
- Resolution: Agnostic (2K/4K/8K,[23] etc.)
- Bit depth: 10-bit or more (up to 16-bit)
- Color primaries: ITU-R BT.2020
- Maximum linearized pixel value: 10,000 cd/m2 for each color R/G/B (content)
- Metadata (required): Mastering Display Color Volume Metadata[24]
- Metadata (optional): MaxCLL, MaxFALL[25]
HDR10+ technology can support the full range of HDR standards to 10,000 cd/m2, 8K and BT.2020 color gamut. Being resolution agnostic, metadata needs to be created only once and can be applied to any target resolution.
HDR10+ is applicable for HEVC and VP9 compatibility via WebM[26] as well as any codec that supports ITU-T T.35 metadata.
Workflow and ecosystem[]
HDR10+ utilizes an HDR10 master file within existing HDR post-production and distribution workflows.
The HDR10+ ecosystem is used within current systems by,
- storing HDR10+ metadata in JSON files
- embedding HDR10+ metadata into HDR10 encoded content
- distribution through digital stream (e.g. streaming with HDR10+ SEI[27])
- displaying HDR10+ content on a capable display (e.g. HDMI interfaces with HDR10+ VSIF) and mobile devices [28]
Metadata generation[]
For offline and video-on-demand (VOD) (e.g. ultra-high-definition Blu-ray, over-the-top (OTT), multi-channel video programming distributor (MVPD)), HDR10+ metadata may be created during the post-production, mastering process or during transcoding/encoding for distribution back-ends by HDR10+ content generation tools in two steps,
- Identifying scene cuts, and
- Performing an image analysis on each scene or frame to derive statistics
HDR10+ metadata is interchanged through a low complexity JSON-structured text file,[29] which is then parsed and injected into video files.
Live encoding[]
Live use cases are possible by delivering HDR10+ metadata in every frame. HEVC encoders generate and inject metadata on live content and mobile phones record video and create HDR10+[30] metadata in real-time during recording. Live encoding is detailed in the Live Encoder Workflow diagram and real time broadcast operations are supported at the point of transmission enabling a metadata-less broadcast operation.
Compatibility[]
HDR10+ metadata follows ITU-T T.35 and can co-exist with other HDR metadata such as HDR10 static metadata that makes HDR10+ content backward compatible[31] with non-HDR10+ TVs. HDR10+ metadata is ignored by devices that do not support the format and video is played back in HDR10.
Administration[]
HDR10+ Technologies, LLC[32] administers the license and certification program for products that want to adopt HDR10+. HDR10+ Technologies, LLC provides the technical specifications, test specifications, and certified logo.
Founders[]
- 20th Century Fox (now 20th Century Studios)
- Panasonic Corporation
- Samsung Electronics
Authorized test centers[]
Certification of products is done through authorized test centers. The following are a list of HDR10+ authorized test centers:
Adoption[]
Adopters[34][]
- Amazon
- Evertz AV
- Panasonic Corporation
- Telechips
- Amlogic (Shanghai) Co., Ltd.
- Extron Electronics
- Parade Technologies, Inc.
- Teledyne LeCroy
- Andy Fiord Production Company
- FF Pictures GmbH
- Pixelogic Media Partners LLC
- TFI Digital Media
- Arcelik
- Fidelity in Motion
- Pixelworks, Inc.
- Top Victory Electronics -TPV
- Arm Limited
- Giant Interactive
- Pixtree, Inc.
- Toshiba Visual Solutions Corp
- Astro Design
- Grass Valley K.K.
- production studio Arspro
- Turbine Medien GmbH
- ATEME SA
- Guangdong Oppo Mobile
- Qualcomm
- 20th Century Studios Inc.
- |Audio Partnership PLC
- Interra Systems
- Rakuten TV
- Unigraf Oy
- Beijing Xiaomi Mobile Software
- Inventory Films
- Realme Chongqing Mobile
- US Screen Corp
- Blackmagic Design Technology Pte Ltd
- Ivi.ru LLC
- Realtek Semiconductor Corp.
- V-Silicon Inc.
- Blackshark Technologies
- JVCKENWOOD Corp
- Rohde & Schwarz GmbH & Co. KG
- Venera Technologies
- Broadcom
- Loewe Technologies GmbH
- Samsung Research America
- VeriSilicon, Inc
- Capella Systems
- Lussier
- Shenzhen SDMC Technology Co., Ltd
- Vestel Elektronik
- Chrontel
- MediaArea.net
- Shenzhen TCL New Technolog Co., Ltd.
- Vicom
- Colorfront
- Media Tek Inc.
- Shenzhen Zidoo Technology Co., Ltd.
- VideoQ
- Crestron Electronics
- MegaChips Technology America
- Shout! Factory LLC
- Visible Light Digital Inc
- Dalet UK Ltd.
- Megogo LLC
- Sirius Pixels
- Vivo Mobile Communications
- Deluxe Entertainment Services Group
- MTI Film
- Socionext, Inc.
- Vizio
- Digital Vision
- Novatek Microelectronics Corp
- Spears & Munsil
- Warner Bros. Entertainment
- DTS, Inc.
- Omnitek
- Spin Digital Video Technologies GmbH
- Weka Media Publishing
- Encoding.com Inc.
- OnePlus Technology (Shenzhen) Co., Ltd
- Synaptics, Inc.
- Xi'an NovaStar Tech Co., Ltd.
- Enteractive GmbH
- Onkyo Corporation
- T1 Technologies
- Yamzz IP BV
- EON 247, A Public Benefit Corporation
- Oppo Digital, Inc.
- Tatung Technology Inc.
HDR10+ certified products[]
Certified product[35] categories include:
- Ultra-High Definition displays
- Ultra-High Definition Blu-ray disc players
- Systems-on-chip (SoC)
- Set-top boxes
- A/V Receivers
- Streaming applications
- Mobile devices
External links[]
- HDR10+ website: https://hdr10plus.org/
References[]
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- High dynamic range
- Ultra-high-definition television