Design of Wide-Band (and Narrow-Band) Band-Pass Microwave Filters on the Insertion Loss Basis

1960 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
pp. 580-593 ◽  
Author(s):  
G.L. Matthaei
2019 ◽  
Vol 30 ◽  
pp. 06002
Author(s):  
Konstantin Kobrin ◽  
Vyacheslav Rudakov ◽  
Mikhail Manuilov

A new compact design of diplexer with high electrical performances is proposed for base station antennas operating within frequency bands 2.3–2.4/2.49–2.69 GHz. The diplexer consists of two interdigital band-pass filters and coaxial power divider. Proposed design has high potential from view poin of implementation of wide-band as well as medium and narrow bands filters. The fabricated diplexer shows the following measured characteristics: reflection coefficient is -18 dB within passbands, insertion loss is -0.28 dB, isolation of ports is -30 dB. Diplexer has the relatively simple easy to manufacture design and compact dimensions, so it may be directly integrated into the base station antennas.


2007 ◽  
Vol 85 (2) ◽  
pp. 101-109 ◽  
Author(s):  
N Partamies ◽  
M Syrjäsuo ◽  
E Donovan

The prototype of an auroral colour camera named Rainbow was run at the Auroral Station in Adventdalen, Svalbard, Norway, during a Finnish optical campaign in February, 2004. Instead of narrow band-pass filters and grey-scale images, this imager records colour images of the aurora using four wide-band channels (a colour CCD) with the field-of-view of about 150°. In this study, we show the results of fitting the four Rainbow channels (cyan-magenta, cyan-green, yellow-magenta, yellow-green) to reconstruct the traditionally filtered auroral wavelengths: green (557.7 nm), red (630.0 nm), and blue (427.8 nm), which were simultaneously recorded by the meridian scanning photometer (MSP) at the same station. This fit is qualitatively extremely good and almost linear throughout the data. In studying the auroral evolution during substorms, there is no significant difference whether MSP or Rainbow data are used. However, due to wide-band colour channels, the background illumination has a strong effect on the Rainbow data. During low signal levels (only background or faint aurora) the reconstruction errors are larger. The data for this study were captured on 21 February 2004. The time period of interest includes a substorm sequence, which is examined using colour auroral images and data from the MSP. PACS No.: 94.20.Ac


2015 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 179-184 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valeria Nocella ◽  
Luca Pelliccia ◽  
Paola Farinelli ◽  
Roberto Sorrentino ◽  
Mario Costa ◽  
...  

A robust and tuneless micromachined waveguide diplexer operating in the frequency range 71–86 GHz is here presented. The diplexer is based on multiple coupled cavities and it is manufactured using micromachining technology on two staked silicon layers. The diplexer consists of two filters combined to a common waveguide port via an E-plane T-junction. The two eight-order band-pass filters are centered at 73.5 and 83.5 GHz. The fractional bandwidths for two bands are 8.8 and 7.8% at higher- and lower-band, respectively. The measured insertion loss is below 0.7 dB for both the filters and the diplexer isolation is better than 55 dB, as required. The proposed technology allows for a very compact device (<20 × 20 × 1.5 mm) and the first prototypes were proved to be very robust to manufacturing tolerances and environmental tests, thus leading to an excellent tuneless manufacturing yield in future production. The diplexer will be employed in next generation terrestrial radio-link communications front-ends.


Author(s):  
A. Fathy ◽  
D. Kalokitis ◽  
V. Pendrick ◽  
E. Balohoubek ◽  
A. Pique ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

JETP Letters ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Zhang ◽  
X. Guo ◽  
H. Qiu ◽  
X. Liu ◽  
M. Han ◽  
...  

1973 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 385-396
Author(s):  
Richard H. Wilson ◽  
Richard W. Stream ◽  
Donald D. Dirks

A series of experiments was performed to study the upward-spread-of-masking phenomena as it pertains to pure-tone and speech stimuli. In the initial two experiments, three maskers were employed over a 40–60-dB intensity range. They included a wide band (50–5500 Hz), a speech spectrum (50–1000 Hz), and a narrow-band (50–950 Hz) noise. All filter slopes were 48 dB/octave, except for the upper slope of the speech-spectrum noise that was 6 dB/octave. In the first experiment, pure-tone thresholds obtained by a tracking procedure revealed no spread of masking when the wide-band and speech-spectrum maskers were used. Substantial spread-of-masking effects, characterized by nonlinear threshold increments outside the spectrum of the masker, were observed with the narrow-band masker. The second experiment included three types of speech stimuli (PBs, spondees, and synthetic sentences) under the same mask conditions used with the pure tones. Threshold shifts observed for the wide- and speech-spectrum maskers were linear with the masking intensity level. However, increased shifts, attributable to spread of masking, were observed with the narrow band and progressed nonlinearly as a function of the masking level. Finally, two additional experiments, performed with two different narrow-band maskers and spondee words, provided insightful information regarding the effects of the spread of masking on speech stimuli.


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