The Kaiser window, also known as the Kaiser–Bessel window, was developed by James Kaiser at Bell Laboratories. It is a one-parameter family of used in finite impulse response filter design and spectral analysis. The Kaiser window approximates the DPSS window which maximizes the energy concentration in the main lobe but which is difficult to compute.
where :
For digital signal processing, the function can be sampled symmetrically as :
where the length of the window is and N can be even or odd. (see A list of window functions)
In the Fourier transform, the first null after the main lobe occurs at which is just in units of N (DFT "bins"). As α increases, the main lobe increases in width, and the side lobes decrease in amplitude. = 0 corresponds to a rectangular window. For large the shape of the Kaiser window (in both time and frequency domain) tends to a Gaussian curve. The Kaiser window is nearly optimal in the sense of its peak's concentration around frequency
\begin{cases}
& \mbox{if } 0 \leq n < N \\
& \mbox{if } N \leq n \leq 2N-1 \\
0 & \mbox{otherwise}. \\
\end{cases}
This defines a window of length 2 N, where by construction d n satisfies the Princen-Bradley condition for the MDCT (using the fact that ): (interpreting n and n + N modulo 2 N). The KBD window is also symmetric in the proper manner for the MDCT: d n = d2 N−1− n.
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