Cutoff frequency
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A bode plot of the Butterworth filter's frequency response, with corner frequency labeled. (The slope −20 dB per decade also equals −6 dB per octave.)
In physics and electrical engineering, the terms cutoff frequency, corner frequency, and break frequency represent a boundary in a system's frequency response at which energy entering the system begins to be attenuated or reflected instead of transmitted. Common examples are
The cutoff frequency can also refer to the plasma frequency, or to some concepts related to renormalization in quantum field theory.
ElectronicsIn electronics, cutoff frequency or corner frequency is the frequency either above which or below which the power output of a circuit, such as a line, amplifier, or electronic filter is Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): 1/2\, the power of the passband. Because power is proportional to the square of voltage, the voltage signal is Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): \sqrt{1/2} of the passband voltage at the corner frequency. Hence, the corner frequency is also known as the −3 dB point because Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): \sqrt{1/2} is close to −3 decibels. A bandpass circuit has two corner frequencies; their geometric mean is called the center frequency. CommunicationsIn communications, the term cutoff frequency can mean the frequency below which a radio wave fails to penetrate a layer of the ionosphere at the incidence angle required for transmission between two specified points by reflection from the layer. WaveguidesThe cutoff frequency of an electromagnetic waveguide is the lowest frequency for which a mode will propagate in it. In fiber optics, it is more common to consider the cutoff wavelength, the maximum wavelength that will propagate in an optical fiber or waveguide. The cutoff frequency is found with the characteristic equation of the Helmholtz equation for electromagnetic waves, which is derived from the electromagnetic wave equation by setting the longitudinal wave number equal to zero and solving for the frequency. Thus, any exciting frequency lower than the cutoff frequency will attenuate, rather than propagate. The following derivation assumes lossless walls. The value of c, the speed of light, should be taken to be the group velocity of light in whatever material fills the waveguide. For a rectangular waveguide, the cutoff frequency is
where Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): n,m \ge 0 are the mode numbers and a and b the lengths of the sides of the rectangle. The cutoff frequency of the TM01 mode in a waveguide of circular cross-section (the transverse-magnetic mode with no angular dependence and lowest radial dependence) is given by
where Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): r
is the radius of the waveguide, and Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): \chi_{01}
is the first root of Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): J_{0}(r)
, the bessel function of the first kind of order 1. For a single-mode optical fiber, the cutoff wavelength is the wavelength at which the normalized frequency is approximately equal to 2.405. Mathematical analysisThe starting point is the wave equation (which is derived from the Maxwell equations),
which becomes a Helmholtz equation by considering only functions of the form
Substituting and evaluating the time derivative gives
The function Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): \psi here refers to whichever field (the electric field or the magnetic field) has no vector component in the longitudinal direction - the "transverse" field. It is a property of all the eigenmodes of the electromagnetic waveguide that at least one of the two fields is transverse. The z axis is defined to be along the axis of the waveguide. The "longitudinal" derivative in the Laplacian can further be reduced by considering only functions of the form
where Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): k_z is the longitudinal wavenumber, resulting in
where subscript T indicates a 2-dimensional transverse Laplacian. The final step depends on the geometry of the waveguide. The easiest geometry to solve is the rectangular waveguide. In that case the remainder of the Laplacian can be evaluated to its characteristic equation by considering solutions of the form
Thus for the rectangular guide the Laplacian is evaluated, and we arrive at
The transverse wavenumbers can be specified from the standing wave boundary conditions for a rectangular geometry crossection with dimensions a and b:
where n and m are the two integers representing a specific eigenmode. Performing the final substitution, we obtain
which is the dispersion relation in the rectangular waveguide. The cutoff frequency Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): \omega_{c}
is the critical frequency between propagation and attenuation, which corresponds to the frequency at which the longitudinal wavenumber Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): k_{z}
is zero. It is given by
The wave equations are also valid below the cutoff frequency, where the longitudinal wave number is imaginary. In this case, the field decays exponentially along the waveguide axis. See also
External links
es:Frecuencia de corte fr:Fréquence de coupure it:Frequenza di taglio nl:Kantelfrequentie ja:遮断周波数 pt:Freqüência de corte ru:Частота среза sv:Brytfrekvens |



