Signal Processing Toolbox |
Frequency Response
The Signal Processing Toolbox enables you to perform frequency domain analysis of both analog and digital filters.
Digital Domain
freqz
uses an FFT-based algorithm to calculate the z-transform frequency response of a digital filter. Specifically, the statement
returns the p-point complex frequency response, , of the digital filter.
In its simplest form, freqz
accepts the filter coefficient vectors b
and a
, and an integer p
specifying the number of points at which to calculate the frequency response. freqz
returns the complex frequency response in vector h
, and the actual frequency points in vector w
in rad/s.
freqz
can accept other parameters, such as a sampling frequency or a vector of arbitrary frequency points. The example below finds the 256-point frequency response for a 12th-order Chebyshev Type I filter. The call to freqz
specifies a sampling frequency fs
of 1000 Hz:
Because the parameter list includes a sampling frequency, freqz
returns a vector f
that contains the 256 frequency points between 0 and fs/2
used in the frequency response calculation.
If you call freqz
with no output arguments, it plots both magnitude versus frequency and phase versus frequency. For example, a ninth-order Butterworth lowpass filter with a cutoff frequency of 400 Hz, based on a 2000 Hz sampling frequency, is
To calculate the 256-point complex frequency response for this filter, and plot the magnitude and phase with freqz
, use
or to display the magnitude and phase responses in fvtool
, which provides additional analysis tools, use
and click the Magnitude and Phase Response button on the toolbar or select Magnitude and Phase Response from the Analysis menu.
freqz
can also accept a vector of arbitrary frequency points for use in the frequency response calculation. For example,
calculates the complex frequency response at the frequency points in w
for the filter defined by vectors b
and a
. The frequency points can range from 0 to . To specify a frequency vector that ranges from zero to your sampling frequency, include both the frequency vector and the sampling frequency value in the parameter list.
Impulse Response | Analog Domain |
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