AAC audio formats

AAC audio formats

When we talk about the different audio formats that we have available for our work or entertainment, we usually hear that there is the MP3 format, Dolby type sound, and in some cases it has audio in the AAC format.

This last audio format is very characteristic of some movies found on DVD discs, which comes to be a technical specification that means Advanced Audio Coding, or translated into Spanish “advanced audio coding”, and which actually comes to be an extremely important resource for those editors who work in the video area.

Working with the AAC audio format represents having a better sound quality than many of the cases is distributed to different speakers, perfectly defined in terms of the position they should occupy in an appropriate environment; In addition, this AAC audio format tends to occupy a smaller space than an MP3 audio format would occupy, which in the design of a DVD disc comes to be known as Layer 3 type audio, which is widely used in the compilation of audio and video for the formation of a DVD movie. But the important thing is that this AAC format provides high-fidelity audio quality and that many times it is used for the well-known “no-home” formats.

It is there where the conveniences of using this AAC audio format are found, since by occupying 30% less space than an MP3 audio file, having better quality and fidelity in its sound, it is widely used not only by those film editors DVD, but also by iTunes as well as by many music discs they represent today.

AAC (Advanced Audio Coding) is a digital audio signal computer format based on a lossy compression algorithm, a process by which some of the audio data is removed in order to obtain the highest possible degree of compression, resulting in an output file that sounds as close to the original as possible.

features

AAC uses a variable bit rate VBR, an encoding method that adapts the number of bits used per second to encode audio data, depending on the complexity of the audio stream at any given time. AAC is an encoding algorithm Broadband audio that has superior performance than MP3, produces better quality on small files and requires less system resources to encode and decode. This codec is oriented to broadband uses and is based on the elimination of redundancies of the acoustic signal, as well as on compression by means of the modified discrete cosine transform (MDCT), very similar to that of MP3.

Advantage

Superior audio quality for the same bitrate (kbps) your Radio at 32kbps will sound like 128kbps in mp3. Stereo sound support from 16 kbps unlike MP3 that supports it from 40 kbps. Support on Blackberry, Iphone, Smartphone equipment. Members of the codec family aacPlus aacPlus v1 is the combination of AAC and SBR, as the high-efficiency standardization profile in MPEG-4 (HE AAC). aacPlus v2 builds on the strong success story of aacPlus v1 and adds value in all fields where increased compression efficiency of stereo signals is mission critical. aacPlus v2 is a true superset of aacPlus v1, aacPlus v1 is from AAC. With the addition of Parametric Stereo in MPEG, aacPlus v2 is the current state of the art low-bit-rate open standard audio codec. Not compatible with MPEG-1. Sample Rate: 96 KHz, 88.2 KHz, 48 KHz, 44.1 KHz, 24 KHz, 22.05 KHz, 16 KHz. Maximum quality between 320 and 448 kbps (5 channels) and between 128 and 192 (2 channels) Maximum supported bitrate: From 12 kbps (in HE-AACv2 profile) to 448 kbps (in AAC-LC profile)

Three options

Highest quality (resolution at 23.43 Hz and 2.6 ms) Non prediction Scalable sampling rates

Three types of profiles:

AAC-LC: 16 KBps to 448 KBps HE-AAC: 16 KBps to 128 KBps HE-AACv2: 12 KBps to 56 KBps (most efficient profile in audio quality)