Revision as of 09:18, 17 April 2011 by Ahmadi (Talk | contribs)


Practice Question on Computing the inverse z-transform

Compute the inverse z-transform of the following signal.

$ X(z)=\frac{1}{1+3z} \mbox{, } \Big|z\Big|>\frac{1}{3} $


Share your answers below

Prof. Mimi gave me this problem in class on Friday, so I'm posting it and my answer here. --Cmcmican 22:38, 16 April 2011 (UTC)


Answer 1

$ X(z)=\frac{1}{3z}\frac{1}{(1+\frac{1}{3z})} $

since $ \Bigg|z\Bigg|>\frac{1}{3} ==>\Bigg|\frac{1}{z}\Bigg|<3 ==>\Bigg|\frac{1}{3}\frac{1}{z}\Bigg|<1 $

$ X(z)=\sum_{k=0}^\infty \frac{1}{3z}\Bigg(\frac{1}{3z}\Bigg)^k=\sum_{k=-\infty}^\infty u[k] \Bigg(\frac{1}{3}\Bigg)^{k+1}z^{-(k+1)} $

let n=k+1

$ =\sum_{n=-\infty}^\infty u[n-1]\Bigg(\frac{1}{3}\Bigg)^{n}z^{-n} $

By comparison with $ \sum_{n=-\infty}^\infty x[n] z^{-n}: $

$ x[n]=\Bigg(\frac{1}{3}\Bigg)^{n}u[n-1]\, $

--Cmcmican 22:38, 16 April 2011 (UTC)

TA's comment: I think you have a mistake here. You can check that by taking the Z-transform of your answer.

Answer 2

Write it here.

Answer 3

Write it here.


Back to ECE301 Spring 2011 Prof. Boutin

Alumni Liaison

Ph.D. 2007, working on developing cool imaging technologies for digital cameras, camera phones, and video surveillance cameras.

Buyue Zhang