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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, d θ/d ω, through a device or transmission medium, where θ is the total phase shift, and ω is the angular frequency equal to 2πf, where f is the 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.

Note: For optical fiber dispersion measurement purposes, the quantity of interest is group delay per unit length, which is the reciprocal of the group velocity of a particular mode. The measured group delay of a signal through an optical fiber exhibits a wavelength dependence due to the various dispersion mechanisms present in the fiber.

Source: from Federal Standard 1037C

It is often desirable that group delay be constant across all frequencies; otherwise there is temporal smearing of the signal. Because group delay is -d θ/d ω, 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., θ = θ0 + Kω where K is a constant).

Thresholds of audibility according to 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

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01-04-2007 01:21:04