Re: AIC23 _ High Pass Filter_BIG_FUNDAMENTAL_PROBLEM
- From: "Akash_DSP" <mathur.akash@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 31 Jul 2008 10:06:08 -0500
Akash_DSP wrote:give
Akash_DSP wrote:
Akash_DSP wrote:
...
Hey Jerry,
thanks for the reply.
Yes, the periodic vairation is sinusoidal. This means that if I
get.willan
audio input with a frequenct spectrum (<20 KHz), frequencies that
thehave
come out of the D/A will have different delays.Different delays for different frequencies, of different delays for
get.same frequency at different times?
...
Jerry
--
Engineering is the art of making what you want from things you can
Hey Jerry,It seems that you have discovered the dispersion of the anti-alias
it is different delays for different frequencies at the same time.
filter. That is normal.
Jerry
--
Engineering is the art of making what you want from things you can
output
Hey Jerry,
you mean to say that if I give an audio input and observe at the
that each frequency comes out with a different delay. That is normal?
If you program your C6416 or c6713 do you see similar behaviour?
In order to sample successfully, there must be no components of the
sampled signal as high as half the sampling frequency. The use of an
anti-alias low-pass filter in the signal path before the sampler is so
nearly universal that many codecs have a filter built in. Being analog,
the a-a filter will affect the phase. The designer is responsible for
correcting any phase distortion that interferes with proper the function
of his design.
Examining the data *** should show you how much phase shift to expect.
Once you plot the filter's phase/frequency characteristic, you will know
if what you see is normal.
Oversampling is an effective way to minimize phase shift in the band of
actual interest. After sampling, the signal can be further filtered
digitally, then decimated.
All real design requires balancing competing objectives; that is an art.
Jerry
--
Engineering is the art of making what you want from things you can get.
???????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????
Hey Jerry,
thanks for the descriptive mail. I really appreciate it.
I understand aliasing thats why in the first message I wrote that my
sampling frequeny is 44.1KHz and I am looking at frequency spectrum 0
-20Khz (Following the Nyquist Criteria). I also understand the use of anti
aliasing filter.
But I am seeing phase delay just moving +- 1ooHz . e.g. there is a big
phase difference b/w the input frequencies 16.0 KHz and 16.10 Khz. 16.0 Khz
and 17.7Khz will then have the same delay. As it is periodic delay.
I am unable to find the reason for this as this is what we normally dont
see in a DSP chip.
Thanks
Akash
.
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