Bessel Filter: Maximally Flat Group Delay: The Maximally Flat Group
Bessel Filter: Maximally Flat Group Delay: The Maximally Flat Group
Bessel Filter: Maximally Flat Group Delay: The Maximally Flat Group
Bessel Filter
This filter takes its name from a German mathematician and
astronomer named Friedrich Bessel who lived between 1784 and
1846. Bessel developed the mathematical theory on which this
form of filter is based. Occasionally, this filter may also be
referred to as Bessel-Thomson filter. This is due to the fact that
W. E. Thomson developed the methodology of using Bessel
functions within the design of this form of filter.
Bessel filters are optimized for maximally-flat time delay or
constant-group delay. This means that they have linear phase
response and excellent transient response to a pulse input. This
comes at the expense of flatness in the pass-band and rate of roll
off. The cutoff frequency is defined as the –3-dB point.
The Bessel filter provides ideal phase characteristics with an
approximately linear phase response up to nearly cut-off
frequency. Though it has a very linear phase response but a
fairly gentle skirt slope, as shown in figure. For applications
where the phase characteristic is important, the Bessel filter is
used. It is a minimal phase shift filter even though its cut-off
characteristics are not very sharp. It is well suited for pulse
applications.
Listed below are some of the key features of the Bessel Filter:
• Maximally flat group delay: The maximally flat group
delay of the Bessel filter means that it equally exhibits a
maximally linear phase response.
• Overshoot: A direct result of the maximally flat group
delay of the Bessel filter it gives an output for a square
wave input with no overshoot because all the frequencies
are delayed by the same amount.
• Slow cut-off: The transition from the pass band to the stop
band for the Bessel filter is much slower or shallower than
for other filters.
Chebyshev Filter
The Chebyshev filter provides a steeper roll-off than the more commonly use Butterworth filter. However,
the additional roll-off of the Chebyshev filter comes at the expense of ripple, and this makes it unsuitable
for a number of applications. The steep roll-off can be used to advantage to remove out of band spurious
emissions such as harmonics or intermodulation.
Advantages:
• Better rate of attenuation beyond the pass-band than
Butterworth.
Disadvantages:
• Ripple in pass-band.
• Considerably more ringing in step response than
Butterworth