Audio Engineering

(Barry) #1
Recording Consoles 805

A band-pass fi lter is derived by multiplying the low-pass coeffi cients with samples
of a sine wave at the center frequency of the band pass. Let’s take our band pass to
be centered on the frequency ofFs /4. Samples of a sine wave at this frequency will
be at the 0 degree point, the 90 degree point, the 180 degree point, the 270 degree
point, and so on. In other words,


0, 1, 0,  1, 0, 1, 0,  1


If we multiply the low-pass coeffi cients by this sequence we get the following,


0, 0.12, 0,  0.22, 0,  0.12, 0


The impulse response of this circuit is illustrated in Figure F27.5. This looks
intuitively right too, because the output can be seen to “ ring ” at Fs /4, which is what
you’d expect from a resonant fi lter. The derived frequency response is also shown in
the diagram.


Digital Frequency Domain Analysis—The Z -Transform


The z -transform of a digital signal is identical to the Fourier transform except for
a change in the lower summation limit. In fact, you can think of ‘ z ’ as a frequency


Fs/8

A

Fs/2

0.4 Impulse response
0.2
0
0.2
0.4
Figure F27.4 : Digital high-pass fi lter.

Fs/8

A
Impulse response
0.4
0.2
0
0.2
0.4 F
s/4 Fs/2
Figure F27.5 : Digital band-pass fi lter.
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