Group delay
Encyclopedia : G : GR : GRO : Group delay
In physics, and in particular in optics, the study of waves and digital signal processing, the term group delay has the following meanings:
- 1. The rate of change of the total phase shift with respect to angular frequency,
- 2. In an optical fiber, the transit time required for optical power, traveling at a given mode's group velocity, to travel a given distance.
Source: from Federal Standard 1037C
It is often desirable for the group delay to be constant across all frequencies; otherwise there is temporal smearing of the signal. Because group delay is [ \tau_g(\omega) = -\frac], as defined in (1), it therefore follows that a constant group delay can be achieved if the transfer function of the device or medium has a linear phase response (i.e., [\phi(\omega) = \phi(0) - \tau_g \omega \ ] where the group delay [\tau_g \ ] is a constant). The degree of nonlinearity of the phase indicates the deviation of the group delay from a constant.
Group delay in the audio field
Group delay has some importance also in the audio field and especially in the sound reproduction field. Many components of an audio reproduction chain, notably loudspeakers and multiway loudspeakers crossover networks, introduce group delay in the audio signal. It is therefore important to know the threshold of audibility of group delay with respect to frequency, especially if the audio chain is supposed to provide a high fidelity reproduction. At the time of writing no extensive data is available and the best thresholds of audibility table has been provided by Blauert and Laws:
| Frequency | Threshold |
|---|---|
| 500 Hz | 3.2 ms |
| 1 kHz | 2 ms |
| 2 kHz | 1 ms |
| 4 kHz | 1.5 ms |
| 8 kHz | 2 ms |
The table above has been published into the following article:
Blauert, J. and Laws, P "Group Delay Distortions in Electroacoustical Systems", Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, Volume 63, Number 5, pp. 1478–1483 (May 1978)
See also
External links
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
