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4 Measurement of Biosignals and Analog Signal Processing
Fig. 4.47: Amount-frequency response of a Cauer filter for filter grades 1 to 5 with a normalised stop-
band frequency ΩD = 1 and a ripple of 0.3.
The still unknown quantities κ, cn, dn, u0 and u0k in Equation 4.80 have the following
meaning:
κ= √1 −κ2 ,
cn = √1 −sn2 ,
dn = √1 −κ2sn2 ,
u0k = n −2k + 1
n
K0 ,
u0 =
K0
n ⋅K∆
sn−1 (
1
√1 + ϵ2∆2 ,k∆) ,
k∆= √1 −∆.
(4.81)
K∆is the complete elliptic integral with modulus ∆. The maximum change of the char-
acteristic function K(jΩ) describes ϵ ⋅∆. ∆can now be further determined by the fol-
lowing relations: For even filter order n is
∆= κn/2
n/2
∏
j=1
Ω2
0j
(4.82)
and for odd filter order n is
∆=
(√κ)n
(n−1)/2
∏
j=1
1 −Ω2
0j
κ2Ω2
0j −1
.
(4.83)
There are also zeros in the transfer function AnTP(P) for the Cauer filters. As with the
inverse Chebyshev-filters, they all lie on the imaginary axis at
P0k = ± j
1
κΩ0k
,
k = 1, 2, . . . , [ n
2] .
(4.84)
To calculate the constant factor A0 of the transfer function AnTP(jΩ) to Equation 4.28,
the zeros must now be considered again. From this follows (without derivation):