Anti-aliasing filters are used at the input of an
analog-to-digital converter. Similar filters are used as
reconstruction filters at the output of a
digital-to-analog converter. In the latter case, the filter prevents imaging, the reverse process of aliasing where in-band frequencies are mirrored out of band.
Oversampling With
oversampling, a higher intermediate digital sample rate is used, so that a nearly ideal
digital filter can
sharply cut off aliasing near the original low
Nyquist frequency and give better
phase response, while a much simpler
analog filter can stop frequencies above the new higher Nyquist frequency. Because analog filters have relatively high cost and limited performance, relaxing the demands on the analog filter can greatly reduce both aliasing and cost. Furthermore, because some
noise is averaged out, the higher sampling rate can moderately improve
signal-to-noise ratio. A signal may be intentionally sampled at a higher rate to reduce the requirements and distortion of the anti-alias filter. For example, compare
CD audio with
high-resolution audio. CD audio filters the signal to a passband edge of 20 kHz, with a stopband Nyquist frequency of 22.05 kHz and sample rate of 44.1 kHz. The narrow 2.05 kHz transition band requires a compromise between filter complexity and performance. High-resolution audio uses a higher sample rate, providing both a higher passband edge and larger transition band, which allows better filter performance with reduced aliasing, reduced attenuation of higher audio frequencies and reduced time and phase domain signal distortion.
Bandpass signals Often, an anti-aliasing filter is a
low-pass filter; this is not a requirement, however. Generalizations of the Nyquist–Shannon sampling theorem allow sampling of other band-limited
passband signals instead of
baseband signals. For signals that are bandwidth limited, but not centered at zero, a
band-pass filter can be used as an anti-aliasing filter. For example, this could be done with a
single-sideband modulated or
frequency modulated signal. If one desired to sample an
FM radio broadcast centered at 87.9 MHz and bandlimited to a 200 kHz band, then an appropriate anti-alias filter would be centered on 87.9 MHz with 200 kHz bandwidth (or
passband of 87.8 MHz to 88.0 MHz), and the sampling rate would be no less than 400 kHz, but should also satisfy other constraints to prevent
aliasing.
Signal overload It is very important to avoid input signal overload when using an anti-aliasing filter. If the signal is strong enough, it can cause
clipping at the
analog-to-digital converter, even after filtering. When
distortion due to clipping occurs after the anti-aliasing filter, it can create components outside the
passband of the anti-aliasing filter; these components can then alias, causing the reproduction of other non-
harmonically related frequencies. == Notes ==