Matched filter
217 visualizzazioni (ultimi 30 giorni)
Mostra commenti meno recenti
How can I write a mtached filter in Matlab? I have the filter design and signal processing tool boxes.
0 Commenti
Risposte (5)
Honglei Chen
il 1 Apr 2011
If you have a signal, x, then the matched filter's coefficients is given by time reverse of x, i.e., x(end:-1:1). If your signal is complex, you also need to to use complex conjugate. You can then use it just as an FIR filter. For example,
>> x = ones(10,1);
>> b = x(end:-1:1);
>> y = filter(b,1,x);
5 Commenti
Mustahsan Ali Khan Khanzada Rajput
il 12 Gen 2017
How to apply matched filter if the signal is complex?
Honglei Chen
il 12 Gen 2017
It's the same, use the filter function. The only difference is when you come up with the filtering coefficient, you need to add a conjugate, like
b = conj(x(end:-1:1))
HTH
Mathuranathan Viswanathan
il 13 Apr 2013
Hi You can try the model given here
Square Root raised Cosine - Matched filter implementation http://www.gaussianwaves.com/2011/04/square-root-raised-cosine-filter-matchedsplit-filter-implementation-2/
Regards Mathuranathan
0 Commenti
Bhaskar
il 15 Apr 2011
To elaborate on Honglei's answer. If the signal you are trying to design a matched filter for, is x, then --
>> b = x(end-1:1);
>> y = filter(b,1,x);
You should already have x.
1 Commento
Nicole Bienert
il 7 Gen 2020
The built in xcorr function can be used - you just need to normalize by fs and square the output. See below for an ideallized example:
%Purpose: Demonstrate how to match filter correctly
BW=3.84e6;
fs = 50*BW; %sample rate
T= 1/fs; %sample period
fc = 330e6; %center freq
chirpLen=0.075; %chirp length
A=3; %amplitude of voltage signal (normally unknown)
Ar=2; %amplitude of reference voltage signal (normally unknown)
%create the signal withought noise and zero padded on either side (zero
%padding not necessary because xcorr does that, I'm just demonstrating that
%signals don't need to be the same length.)
sig=[zeros(1,ceil(chirpLen*fs)),A*chirp(t,0,t(end),BW),zeros(1,ceil(chirpLen*fs))];
%create the reference chirp
ref_chirp=Ar*chirp(t,0,t(end),BW);
t=[0:T:(length(ref_chirp)-1)*T];
%normalize reference chirp: The reference chirp needs to have energy of 1
%so that it doesn't bias the output of the match filter. A filter shouldn't
%be applying gain to the signal or changing the units. The signal is in
%volts, so we divide by the square root of the energy to normalize it.
%If you know the signal's amplitude (for CW or FMCW):
energy=Ar^2/2*chirpLen;
%If you don't know the signal's amplitude, integrate to find energy (if it is noiseless):
%energy=trapz(t,ref_chirp.^2)
ref_chirp=ref_chirp/sqrt(energy);
% perform match filtering
[R,lags] = xcorr(sig,ref_chirp); %signals don't need to be the same length
%R is the sum of each data sample as the signals are shifted past
%eachother, so to make the numerical integration correct, you need to
%multiply by dx which is T in this case. Then to get the filtered voltage
%signal in units of energy, you need to square it.
R=(abs(R*T)).^2; %absolute value only necessary if signals are complex
% take only positive side
R = R(lags>=0);
lags=lags(lags>=0);
[matchFiltPeak,index]=max(R);
figure()
plot(lags*T,R)
xlim([index-250 index+250]*T)
display(['Energy in signal was: ',num2str(A.^2/2*chirpLen)])
display(['which is the same as the peak of the match filter: ',num2str(matchFiltPeak)])
7 Commenti
Walter Roberson
il 5 Gen 2022
code not working, t is undefined and later circular reference to refchirp
Charles Sutherland
il 23 Mar 2022
This worked for me:
Change
t=[0:T:(length(ref_chirp)-1)*T];
to
t=[0:T:((chirpLen*fs)-1)*T];
and then move it to -
BW=3.84e6;
fs = 50*BW; %sample rate
T= 1/fs; %sample period
fc = 330e6; %center freq
chirpLen=0.075; %chirp length
A=3; %amplitude of voltage signal (normally unknown)
Ar=2; %amplitude of reference voltage signal (normally unknown)
t=[0:T:((chirpLen*fs)-1)*T];
Worked for me anyway...
Cheers
Vedere anche
Prodotti
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!