Difference between revisions of "Butterworth Filters"
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</math>|{{EquationRef|5}}}} | </math>|{{EquationRef|5}}}} | ||
− | Since we can write <math>-1=e^{j\pi}</math>, the <math>N</math> roots of <math>-1^\frac{1}{N}</math> can | + | Since we can write <math>-1=e^{j\pi}</math>, the <math>N</math> roots of <math>\left(-1\right)^\frac{1}{N}</math> can be written as: |
{{NumBlk|::|<math> | {{NumBlk|::|<math> | ||
Line 38: | Line 38: | ||
</math>|{{EquationRef|6}}}} | </math>|{{EquationRef|6}}}} | ||
− | For <math>k=1\ldots N</math>. | + | For <math>k=1\ldots N</math>. Thus, we get: |
+ | |||
+ | {{NumBlk|::|<math> | ||
+ | -\frac{s^2}{\omega_0^2} = e^{j\pi\frac{2k-1}{N}} | ||
+ | </math>|{{EquationRef|7}}}} |
Revision as of 16:56, 15 March 2021
Butterworth filters are a class of all-pole filters, where the poles of the normalized transfer function are equally spaced along the unit circle (). This results in a maximally flat pass-band magnitude response, or equivalently:
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(1)
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This means that the derivative of the magnitude at DC is zero.
The Low-Pass Butterworth Filter
The low-pass Butterworth filter has the following magnitude response:
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(2)
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Where is the filter order and is the frequency. Note that at . Thus:
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(3)
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Thus, the poles are the roots of:
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(4)
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Or equivalently:
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(5)
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Since we can write , the roots of can be written as:
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(6)
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For . Thus, we get:
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(7)
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