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Automatic Transmitter Identification System (television)

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The Automatic Transmitter Identification System (ATIS) is a protocol used for the station identification of television channels carried on satellite TV. ATIS is only required for analog TV transmission, and only via satellites or earth stations under U.S. jurisdiction. It is continuously repeated at all times an earth station, such as a teleport, is using a transponder on a satellite. The FCC rules for ATIS are set forth in 47 CFR ยง25.281.

ATIS is a Morse code transmission, sent on a subcarrier of 7.1MHz, and must activate automatically at any time the station is transmitting. The center frequency must be no more than 25kHz from this nominal value, and the frequency deviation must be no more than 25kHz peak when being modulated. Injection must be at a minimum of โˆ’26dB, referenced to the unmodulated carrier. The tone used to modulate the subcarrier is nominally 1200Hz, but may vary by as much as 800Hz (400 to 2000Hz).

The ATIS message is sent at a transmission rate of 15 to 25 words per minute, and must not exceed 30 seconds in its entire length. The message includes the FCC-assigned callsign of the earth station, its telephone number, a ten-digit random number which acts as its serial number, and sometimes other information which is voluntary. The telephone number must immediately connect to personnel who can resolve radio interference and other frequency coordination issues. The serial number cannot be easily changed.

ATIS encoders must be included in the uplink airchain of all transmitters as of 1991 March 1, "in a method that cannot easily be defeated".

Other subcarriers piggybacked on the video carrier are also included in transmissions, often at 6.2 and 6.8MHz, just above the bandpass of the video signal (even if scrambled). These carry left and right stereo audio and second audio program, and sometimes radio stations or radio networks which may be unrelated to the TV network. (Backhauls are too intermittent for such uses, but may carry in-house private audio channels instead.) Because these, including ATIS, are all audio, they can all be tuned by an analog TVRO receiver. However, digital TV has overtaken analog because multiple channels can be transmitted on one transponder. These signals carry their station ID as data instead.