One thing I do know...it's a damn confusing mess! I have a "universal" player (Denon 2900) and it, like the previous one, (Pioneer DV45A) knows how to figure out what to do, so I don't really need to know.
For DVD-A 96KHz is all you get for 5.1 multichannel, but if the recording is only stereo, 192KHz is possible. I have the impression that DVD-A, unlike SACD, is a very flexible protocol. The disc producer has a certain amount of data bandwidth to work with, and can allocate it as he chooses.(eg: #channels, sampling rate, coefficients for realtime mixdown to stereo, video, etc.)
The 44.1 KHz sampling rate of regular (redbook) CDs is really cutting it close to the minimum acceptable for 20KHz audio. The oft-quoted Nyquist criteria for signal fidelity(sampling rate should be at least twice the highest frequerncy of interest) applies to sine waves, and we know that music is not a pure sine wave. Increasing the sample rate to 96KHz is a significant improvement. Going higher than that provides little if any improvement. Of course 24 bits can more accurately represent an analog waveform, and/or give greater dynamic range, but the benefit will not be realized in practice unless the analog signal processing is also good.
For DVD-A 96KHz is all you get for 5.1 multichannel, but if the recording is only stereo, 192KHz is possible. I have the impression that DVD-A, unlike SACD, is a very flexible protocol. The disc producer has a certain amount of data bandwidth to work with, and can allocate it as he chooses.(eg: #channels, sampling rate, coefficients for realtime mixdown to stereo, video, etc.)
The 44.1 KHz sampling rate of regular (redbook) CDs is really cutting it close to the minimum acceptable for 20KHz audio. The oft-quoted Nyquist criteria for signal fidelity(sampling rate should be at least twice the highest frequerncy of interest) applies to sine waves, and we know that music is not a pure sine wave. Increasing the sample rate to 96KHz is a significant improvement. Going higher than that provides little if any improvement. Of course 24 bits can more accurately represent an analog waveform, and/or give greater dynamic range, but the benefit will not be realized in practice unless the analog signal processing is also good.