Revision as of 20:15, 10 September 2010 by Zhao148 (Talk | contribs)

Pick a note frequency $ f_0=392Hz $

$ x(t)=cos(2\pi f_0t)=cos(2\pi *392t) $
$ a.\ when\ sample\ period\ T_1=\frac{1}{1000} $
$ 2f_0<\frac{1}{T_1}, \ No\ aliasing\ occurs. $

$ \begin{align} x_1(n) &=x(nT_1)=cos(2\pi *392nT_1)=cos(2\pi *\frac{392}{1000}n) \\ &=\frac{1}{2}\left( e^{-j2\pi *\frac{392}{1000}n} + e^{j2\pi *\frac{392}{1000}n} \right) \\ \end{align} $

$ 0<2\pi *\frac{392}{1000}<\pi $
$ -\pi<-2\pi *\frac{392}{1000}<0 $

$ \begin{align} \mathcal{X}_1(\omega) &=2\pi *\frac{1}{2} \left[\delta (\omega -2\pi *\frac{392}{1000}) + \delta (\omega + 2\pi *\frac{392}{1000})\right] \\ &=\pi \left[\delta (\omega -2\pi *\frac{392}{1000}) + \delta (\omega + 2\pi *\frac{392}{1000})\right] \\ \end{align} $

graph x1w

$ for\ all\ \omega $
$ \mathcal{X}_1(\omega)=\pi* rep_{2\pi} \left[\delta (\omega -2\pi *\frac{392}{1000}) + \delta (\omega + 2\pi *\frac{392}{1000})\right] $

graph x1w_all

$ b.\ when\ sample\ period\ T_2=\frac{1}{500} $
$ 2f_0>\frac{1}{T_2}, \ Aliasing\ occurs. $

$ \begin{align} x_2(n) &=x(nT_2)=cos(2\pi *392nT_2)=cos(2\pi *\frac{392}{500}n) \\ &=\frac{1}{2}\left( e^{-j2\pi *\frac{392}{500}n} + e^{j2\pi *\frac{392}{500}n} \right) \\ \end{align} $

$ \pi<2\pi *\frac{392}{500}<2\pi $
$ -2\pi<-2\pi *\frac{392}{500}<\pi $
$ \mathcal{X}_2(\omega)=\pi \left[\delta (\omega -2\pi *\frac{392}{500}) + \delta (\omega + 2\pi *\frac{392}{500})\right] $
$ X_2(f)=\frac{1}{2}\left[\delta (f -\frac{392}{500}) + \delta (f + \frac{392}{500})\right] $

graph X2

$ for\ all\ the\ f $
$ X_2(f)=\frac{1}{2}rep_2\left[\delta (f -\frac{392}{500}) + \delta (f + \frac{392}{500})\right] $

graph X2_all

Alumni Liaison

Meet a recent graduate heading to Sweden for a Postdoctorate.

Christine Berkesch