"Your questions are hard to answer because they impose impossible conditions but I'll repeat my answers because I think I have you figured out:
Repeat after me: You cannot mix NTSC, DTV or ATSC 3.0 (or any other modulation scheme so conceived and so dedicated) on the same RF TV channel.
"By definition, each modulation scheme consumes an entire TV channel."
Re:
I thought that your entire reply was wholly obvious
From your official link noting I was never referring to synthesize HDR content my TV can do all that ,
ATSC S34-168r8 Video – HEVC 17 January 2017
13
6.3.2.3 HLG transfer characteristics
For HDR video with the HLG transfer characteristics, the following constraints apply
I asked about more spectrum vis a vis another RF transmitter and RF spectrum or not since you maybe disputed that one transmitter can not do that If I understood correctly prior to reading just above here for simultaneous 480i/HDTV and ATSC 3.0 2160p up to HDR HLG that obviously combined may not fit in a single regulated HDTV channel HEVC notwithstanding at any decent quality below the lower nyquist rate .
Some background you may have a misunderstanding here you may not know beyond what I can read on the web about HLG HDR and ATSC 3.0 anyway as for the other maybe thats debatable this is not my career and I'm not familiar with you .
I understand at an enthusiast level with an electronics education in the late 1960's to 1970 and practical knowledge ,brief TV bench work and some self study going forward PC's starting in early 1980's can build and fix same , some electronics at the board level ,ohm's law ,radio RF propagation and amatuer radio at
in part maybe nearly FCC gen class but dated, enthusiast level and my education Digital discrete time signals and IPTV , mpeg compression and audio codecs ,HEVC and so on , electrical conductivity LCD panels ,nyquist rates lower nyquist rates , digital signal sampling ,perceptual lossy encoding , lossless encoding,noise shaping Dolby AC-4 and MPEG-H 3D Audio MPEG-2 / H.262 and MPEG-4 AVC / H.264 video codecs. MPEG-H HEVC / H.265 codec RF modulation and so on.
Not everything about any of this and not any of it at a career level but I can bench TVs ,PC , and
some radios and so on ,
From another post of mine here something maybe speculative and factual in case you missed it , it's unofficial ,
AFAIK Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG) is the ATSC 3.0 proposal under consideration maybe you know something my web links don't or no ? .
** HLG is supported by HDMI 2.0b, HEVC, and VP9 Freeview Play and YouTube.
HLG does not need to use metadata since it is compatible with both SDR displays and HDR displays. HLG can be used with displays of different brightness in a wide range of viewing environments.
** source -Wikipedia -
February 3, 2017 FCC Pushing for ATSC 3.0 Standard for Over-the-Air 4K Broadcasting With HDR
Some of the new broadcast content enhancements that would come with ATSC 3.0 implementation include the already-mentioned capacity for 4K resolution along with HDR (using new broadcast-friendly standards like Hybrid Log Gamma), higher frame rates for content, wide color gamut and even direct-to-mobile device broadcasts of next-generation over-the-air content.
All of these ATSC 3.0 enhancements are still a ways off and while the
mainstream 4K TVs of 2017 that are now being released in the U.S don’t have ATSC 3.0 tuners, Televisions will start coming with them in 2018 or later if this new broadcast content standard becomes a consumer market reality. Furthermore, while ATSC 3.0 is not designed to be backwards compatible with ATSC 1.0
http://4k.com/news/fcc-pushing-for-...-over-the-air-4k-broadcasting-with-hdr-18459/