scipy.signal.besselap¶
- 
scipy.signal.besselap(N, norm='phase')[source]¶
- Return (z,p,k) for analog prototype of an Nth-order Bessel filter. - Parameters
- Nint
- The order of the filter. 
- norm{‘phase’, ‘delay’, ‘mag’}, optional
- Frequency normalization: - phase
- The filter is normalized such that the phase response reaches its midpoint at an angular (e.g. rad/s) cutoff frequency of 1. This happens for both low-pass and high-pass filters, so this is the “phase-matched” case. [6] - The magnitude response asymptotes are the same as a Butterworth filter of the same order with a cutoff of Wn. - This is the default, and matches MATLAB’s implementation. 
- delay
- The filter is normalized such that the group delay in the passband is 1 (e.g. 1 second). This is the “natural” type obtained by solving Bessel polynomials 
- mag
- The filter is normalized such that the gain magnitude is -3 dB at angular frequency 1. This is called “frequency normalization” by Bond. [1] 
 - New in version 0.18.0. 
 
- Returns
- zndarray
- Zeros of the transfer function. Is always an empty array. 
- pndarray
- Poles of the transfer function. 
- kscalar
- Gain of the transfer function. For phase-normalized, this is always 1. 
 
 - See also - bessel
- Filter design function using this prototype 
 - Notes - To find the pole locations, approximate starting points are generated [2] for the zeros of the ordinary Bessel polynomial [3], then the Aberth-Ehrlich method [4] [5] is used on the Kv(x) Bessel function to calculate more accurate zeros, and these locations are then inverted about the unit circle. - References - 1
- C.R. Bond, “Bessel Filter Constants”, http://www.crbond.com/papers/bsf.pdf 
- 2
- Campos and Calderon, “Approximate closed-form formulas for the zeros of the Bessel Polynomials”, arXiv:1105.0957. 
- 3
- Thomson, W.E., “Delay Networks having Maximally Flat Frequency Characteristics”, Proceedings of the Institution of Electrical Engineers, Part III, November 1949, Vol. 96, No. 44, pp. 487-490. 
- 4
- Aberth, “Iteration Methods for Finding all Zeros of a Polynomial Simultaneously”, Mathematics of Computation, Vol. 27, No. 122, April 1973 
- 5
- Ehrlich, “A modified Newton method for polynomials”, Communications of the ACM, Vol. 10, Issue 2, pp. 107-108, Feb. 1967, DOI:10.1145/363067.363115 
- 6
- Miller and Bohn, “A Bessel Filter Crossover, and Its Relation to Others”, RaneNote 147, 1998, http://www.rane.com/note147.html 
 
