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Raised-cosine filter

The raised-cosine filter is a filter frequently used for pulse-shaping in digital modulation due to its ability to minimise intersymbol interference (ISI). Its name stems from the fact that the non-zero portion of the frequency spectrum of its simplest form () is a cosine function, 'raised' up to sit above the (horizontal) axis.

Mathematical description

The raised-cosine filter is an implementation of a low-pass Nyquist filter, i.e., one that has the property of vestigial symmetry. This means that its spectrum exhibits odd symmetry about , where is the symbol-period of the communications system.

Its frequency-domain description is a piecewise-defined function, given by:

or in terms of havercosines:

for

and characterised by two values; , the roll-off factor, and , the reciprocal of the symbol-rate.

The impulse response of such a filter is given by:

in terms of the normalised sinc function. Here, this is the "communications sinc" rather than the mathematical one.

Roll-off factor

The roll-off factor, , is a measure of the excess bandwidth of the filter, i.e. the bandwidth occupied beyond the Nyquist bandwidth of . Some authors use .

If we denote the excess bandwidth as , then:

where is the symbol-rate.

The graph shows the amplitude response as is varied between 0 and 1, and the corresponding effect on the impulse response. As can be seen, the time-domain ripple level increases as decreases. This shows that the excess bandwidth of the filter can be reduced, but only at the expense of an elongated impulse response.

β = 0

As approaches 0, the roll-off zone becomes infinitesimally narrow, hence:

where is the rectangular function, so the impulse response approaches . Hence, it converges to an ideal or brick-wall filter in this case.

β = 1

When , the non-zero portion of the spectrum is a pure raised cosine, leading to the simplification:

or

Bandwidth

The bandwidth of a raised cosine filter is most commonly defined as the width of the non-zero frequency-positive portion of its spectrum, i.e.:

As measured using a spectrum analyzer, the radio bandwidth B in Hz of the modulated signal is twice the baseband bandwidth BW (as explained in [1]), i.e.:

Auto-correlation function

The auto-correlation function of raised cosine function is as follows:

The auto-correlation result can be used to analyze various sampling offset results when analyzed with auto-correlation.

Application

When used to filter a symbol stream, a Nyquist filter has the property of eliminating ISI, as its impulse response is zero at all (where is an integer), except .

Therefore, if the transmitted waveform is correctly sampled at the receiver, the original symbol values can be recovered completely.

However, in many practical communications systems, a matched filter is used in the receiver, due to the effects of white noise. For zero ISI, it is the <u>net</u> response of the transmit and receive filters that must equal :

And therefore:

These filters are called root-raised-cosine filters.

Raised cosine is a commonly used apodization filter for fiber Bragg gratings.

References

  • Glover, I.; Grant, P. (2004). Digital Communications (2nd ed.). Pearson Education Ltd. .
  • Proakis, J. (1995). Digital Communications (3rd ed.). McGraw-Hill Inc. .
  • Tavares, L.M.; Tavares G.N. (1998) Comments on "Performance of Asynchronous Band-Limited DS/SSMA Systems" . IEICE Trans. Commun., Vol. E81-B, No. 9

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