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Filter & Q-Factor Online Simulation

Unified Filter & Q-Factor Analyzer Exploring Gain, Selectivity, ripples, and Side-Lobes Design Relationship Q = f c / BW BW = -- Hz Transfer Function Characteristic |H(f)| ≈ 1 / √(1 + ε 2 C n 2 ) Control Panel Filter Type: Butterworth (Flat / No Lobes) Chebyshev (Equiripple / Side-Lobes) Center Frequency: 1000 Hz Quality Factor (Q): 5.0 Ripple/Lobe Intensity: 0.5 Recommended Design Multiple Feedba...

Which of the following statements are correct for active filters?

100. Which of the following statements are correct for active filters? A. Multiple-feedback are preferred for Q ≤ 10. B. For Q > 10, state-variable filter is used. C. The upper and lower cut-off frequencies have arithmetic symmetry about centre frequency f c for smaller Q values. D. As Q is increased, the filter becomes less selective and both upper and lower cut-off frequencies approximate geometric symmetry. Choose the correct answer from the options given below: A and B only [Option ID = 1229] A and C only [Option ID = 1230] B and C only [Option ID = 1231] C and D only [Option ID = 1232] Correct Answer: 1 Solution: Statement A: Correct. Multiple-feedback (MFB) circuits are simple but get unstable if the "Q" (sharpness) is too high. They are be...

The characteristic equation for the output voltage of an All-pass filter is given by:

  99. The characteristic equation for the output voltage of an All-pass filter is given by: V o = V in [ 1 - 2 / (jωRC + 1) ] [Option ID = 1225] V o = V in [ 1 - 2 / (jωRC) ] [Option ID = 1226] V o = V in [ -1 + 2 / (jωRC + 1) ] [Option ID = 1227] V o = V in [ 2 / (jωRC + 1) ] [Option ID = 1228] Correct Answer: 1 Solution Based on the question, the correct characteristic equation is Option 1 : V o = V in [ 1 - 2 / (jωRC + 1) ] Comparison: How others look To identify filters quickly, look at the numerator (the top part of the fraction): 1. Low-Pass Filter (Blocks Highs) Notice: It has only a "1" on top. It is the simplest one. V o = V in [ 1 / (jωRC + 1) ] 2. High-Pass Filter (Blocks Lows) Notice: It has the frequency symbol (jωRC) on top. V o = V in [ j...

A filter is needed to remove induced 60 Hz hum from a transducer signal. The rejection bandwidth is 2 Hz. The correct combination of R damping and C values for this filter are:

  98. A filter is needed to remove induced 60 Hz hum from a transducer signal. The rejection bandwidth is 2 Hz. The correct combination of R damping and C values for this filter are: 1. 30 Ω, 32.5 milli Farads [Option ID = 3221]  2. 68 Ω, 30.5 milli Farads [Option ID = 3222]  3. 82 Ω, 3.25 milli Farads [Option ID = 3223]  4. 89 Ω, 2.65 milli Farads [Option ID = 3224]  Correct Answer : 4 Solution To remove the 60 Hz frequency, we use a notch filter with a center frequency (f 0 ) of 60 Hz and a rejection bandwidth (BW) of 2 Hz. Step 1: Calculate the Quality Factor (Q) The Q factor determines the sharpness of the notch: Q = f 0 / BW = 60 / 2 = 30 Step 2: Calculate the Damping Resistance (R damping ) Using the damping relationship for this specific filter topology: R damping = 3Q - 1 = 3(30) - 1 = 89 Ω Step 3: Calculate the...

Which of the following statements is NOT correct about Butterworth filter?

  97. Which of the following statements is NOT correct about Butterworth filter?  1. Butterworth is the most popular alignment type. [Option ID = 3217]  2. Butterworth is characterised by its moderate amplitude and phase response. [Option ID = 3218]  3. It exhibits the slowest roll‐off of any monoatomic (single‐slope) filter. [Option ID = 3219]  4. This is the only filter whose 3dB down frequency equals its critical frequency (f =f ). [Option ID = 3220]  Correct Answer : 3 Solution Butterworth filter has a slower roll-off compared to the Chebyshev or Elliptic filters, it does not have the slowest roll-off of all monotonic filters. The Bessel filter actually has a much slower roll-off than the Butterworth filter for the same order (n). The Butterworth is "middle-of-the-road" in terms of roll-off speed. Previous yr Question papers with Full Explanations → Electronics and Communiaction Study Materials → ...

Which of the following statements is NOT correct for a Chebyshev Filter?

  96. Which of the following statements is NOT correct for a Chebyshev Filter?  1. Chebyshev filter tends to exhibit ringing effect with transient signals. [Option ID = 3213]  2. Time delay and phase characteristics of Chebyshev filter are comparitively better than that of Butterworth filter. [Option ID = 3214]  3. Chebyshev filters have a sharper slope than Butterworth filters. [Option ID = 3215]  4. Chebyshev filters are capable of achieving more attenuation in stopband. [Option ID = 3216]  Correct Answer : B Solution Chebyshev filters achieve a sharper cutoff by allowing ripple (usually in the passband for Type I). This sharper response comes at the cost of poorer phase linearity and more variation in group delay than a Butterworth filter. Therefore, Butterworth filters generally have better phase and time-delay characteristics. Previous yr Question papers with Full Explanations → Electronics and Communi...

OFDM BER 16-QAM 4-QAM QPSK + Simulation

Simulation of BER vs. SNR for OFDM Modulation with BPSK Read the theory # OFDM Symbols: Subcarriers (N): Cyclic Prefix (Ncp): SNR (dB): Reset BER Results Log SNR (dB) BER Update BER vs SNR Plot Transmitted Bits (Partial) Received Bits (Partial) Compare the BER with Original BPSK → Mathematical Logic of the Simulation 1. Bit-to-Symbol Mapping (BPSK) Each bit \(b_i \in \{0, 1\}\) is mapped to a bipolar complex value: If bit = 1, \(X_k = 1 + 0j\) If bit...

OFDM BER vs SNR (with Simulation)

Theoretical BER vs SNR for OFDM Theoretical BER vs SNR for OFDM Fundamental Rule: OFDM is a multiplexing scheme, not a modulation scheme. In an ideal AWGN channel, the BER of OFDM is identical to the BER of the underlying modulation used on its sub-carriers. If you use QPSK on your OFDM sub-carriers, your theoretical BER curve is simply the QPSK curve. 1. Standard Formulas (AWGN Channel) Assuming \(N\) sub-carriers and let \(\gamma_b = \frac{E_b}{N_0}\) (SNR per bit): BPSK / QPSK OFDM: \[P_b = Q\left(\sqrt{2 \gamma_b}\right) = \frac{1}{2}\text{erfc}\left(\sqrt{\gamma_b}\right)\] 16-QAM OFDM (Gray Coded): \[P_b \approx \frac{3}{4} Q\left(\sqrt{\frac{4}{5} \gamma_b}\right)\] 64-QAM OFDM: \[P_b \approx \frac{7}{12} Q\left(\sqrt{\frac{2}{7} ...

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