Relationship between Magnitude and Phase Quote of the Day Experience

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Relationship between Magnitude and Phase Quote of the Day Experience is the name everyone gives to their mistakes. Oscar Wilde Content and Figures are from Discrete-Time Signal Processing, 2e by Oppenheim, Shafer, and Buck, 1999-2000 Prentice Hall Inc.

Relation between Magnitude and Phase For general LTI system – Knowledge about magnitude doesn’t provide any information about phase – Knowledge about phase doesn’t provide any information about magnitude For linear constant-coefficient difference equations however – There is some constraint between magnitude and phase – If magnitude and number of pole-zeros are known Only a finite number of choices for phase – If phase and number of pole-zeros are known Only a finite number of choices for magnitude (ignoring scale) A class of systems called minimum-phase – Magnitude specifies phase uniquely – Phase specifies magnitude uniquely Copyright (C) 2005 Güner Arslan 351M Digital Signal Processing 2

Square Magnitude System Function Explore possible choices of system function of the form He j 2 H e j H e j H* 1 / z* H z z e j Restricting the system to be rational M M 1 c z b0 H z a0 k k 1 N 1 1 c z 1 dk z 1 * H 1/ z * b0 a0 k 1 M C z H z H* 1 / z* 2 1 dk* z 1 ck z 1 1 c*k z 1 dk z 1 1 d*k z k 1 N k 1 j k 1 N k 1 The square system function b0 a0 * k 2 Given H e we can get C(z) What information on H(z) can we get from C(z)? Copyright (C) 2005 Güner Arslan 351M Digital Signal Processing 3

Poles and Zeros of Magnitude Square System Function M * C z H z H 1 / z * b0 a0 2 1 c z 1 c z * k k 1 N 1 k 1 1 k dk z 1 1 d*k z For every pole dk in H(z) there is a pole of C(z) at dk and (1/dk)* For every zero ck in H(z) there is a zero of C(z) at ck and (1/ck)* Poles and zeros of C(z) occur in conjugate reciprocal pairs If one of the pole/zero is inside the unit circle the reciprocal will be outside – Unless there are both on the unit circle If H(z) is stable all poles have to be inside the unit circle – We can infer which poles of C(z) belong to H(z) However, zeros cannot be uniquely determined – Example to follow Copyright (C) 2005 Güner Arslan 351M Digital Signal Processing 4

Example Two systems with 1 z 1 2z H z 1 0.8e z 1 0.8e 2 1 z 1 1 0. 5z 1 H1 z 1 0. 8e j / 4z 1 1 0. 8e j / 4z 1 1 2 j / 4 1 1 j / 4 1 z Both share the same magnitude square system function H1 z Copyright (C) 2005 Güner Arslan H2 z 351M Digital Signal Processing H z H 1 / z C z H1 z H1* 1 / z* 2 * 2 * 5

All-Pass System A system with frequency response magnitude constant Important uses such as compensating for phase distortion Simple all-pass system z 1 a* Hap z 1 az 1 Magnitude response constant Hap e j * j e j a* j 1 a e e j 1 ae 1 ae j Most general form with real impulse response z 1 dk Mc z 1 ck* z 1 ck Hap z A 1 1 1 ck* z 1 k 1 1 dk z k 1 1 ck z Mr A: positive constant, dk: real poles, ck: complex poles Copyright (C) 2005 Güner Arslan 351M Digital Signal Processing 6

Phase of All-Pass Systems Hap e j * j e j a* j 1 a e e j 1 ae 1 ae j Let’s write the phase with a represented in polar form e j re j r sin 2 arctan j j 1 r cos 1 re e The group delay of this system can be written as e j re j 1 r2 1 r2 grd j j 2 2 j j 1 re e 1 2 r cos r 1 re e For stable and causal system r 1 – Group delay of all-pass systems is always positive Phase between 0 and is always negative arg Hap e j 0 for Copyright (C) 2005 Güner Arslan 0 351M Digital Signal Processing 7

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