(4 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
[[Category:ECE301Spring2011Boutin]] [[Category:Problem_solving]]
 
[[Category:ECE301Spring2011Boutin]] [[Category:Problem_solving]]
 
----
 
----
= Practice Question on Computing the Fourier Transform of a Continuous-time Signal  =
+
= [[:Category:Problem_solving|Practice Question]] on Computing the Fourier Transform of a Continuous-time Signal  =
  
 
Compute the Fourier transform of the signal
 
Compute the Fourier transform of the signal
Line 36: Line 36:
  
 
--[[User:Cmcmican|Cmcmican]] 17:43, 23 February 2011 (UTC)
 
--[[User:Cmcmican|Cmcmican]] 17:43, 23 February 2011 (UTC)
:TA's comments: You're almost there. You just have to be careful about the sign in the exponential when using the time shift property of the Fourier transform. Here <math class="inline">t_0=-\frac{\pi}{12}</math>. So this will yield a multiplication by <math class="inline">e^{j\omega \frac{\pi}{12}}</math> in the frequency domain and not <math class="inline">e^{-j\omega \frac{\pi}{12}}</math>.
+
:TA's comments: You're almost there. You got the transform of the cosine right. However, regarding the time shift property, you still have some mistake in it. Try first to identify what is <math>t_0</math> equal to in this case.
 +
:Instructor's hint: this has to do with cascading a time shift and a time scaling. Recall that the order of the operation is relevant.-pm
  
 
=== Answer 3  ===
 
=== Answer 3  ===
 +
Instructor's suggestion: how about writing this as a linear combination of two complex exponentials, and then "guessing" the right transform for each exponential separately (pulling out the constants using linearity of the Fourier transform)? -pm
 +
 
Write it here.
 
Write it here.
 
----
 
----
 
[[2011_Spring_ECE_301_Boutin|Back to ECE301 Spring 2011 Prof. Boutin]]
 
[[2011_Spring_ECE_301_Boutin|Back to ECE301 Spring 2011 Prof. Boutin]]

Latest revision as of 10:26, 11 November 2011


Practice Question on Computing the Fourier Transform of a Continuous-time Signal

Compute the Fourier transform of the signal

$ x(t) = \cos (2 \pi t+\frac{\pi}{12} )\ $


Share your answers below

You will receive feedback from your instructor and TA directly on this page. Other students are welcome to comment/discuss/point out mistakes/ask questions too!


Answer 1

Use answer to previous practice problem and the time shifting property.

$ \mathfrak{F}\Bigg(s(t-t_0)\Bigg)=e^{j\omega t_0}\mathfrak{F}\Bigg(x(t)\Bigg) $

Therefore,

$ \mathcal X (\omega)=e^{j\omega \frac{\pi}{12}}2\pi \delta(\omega-2\pi k) $

--Cmcmican 20:52, 21 February 2011 (UTC)

TA's comments: In the time shift property of the Fourier transform that you provided, it should be $ e^{-j\omega t_0} $ and not $ e^{j\omega t_0} $. Another thing is that the transform of a cosine should yield only two deltas in the frequency domain.

Answer 2

I'll try this again, using my new answer from the previous problem, and correcting my time shifting property.

$ \mathfrak{F}\Bigg(s(t-t_0)\Bigg)=e^{-j\omega t_0}\mathfrak{F}\Bigg(x(t)\Bigg) $

Therefore $ \mathcal X (\omega) =e^{-j\omega \frac{\pi}{12}}\Bigg(\pi\delta(\omega-2\pi)+\pi\delta(\omega+2\pi)\Bigg) $

--Cmcmican 17:43, 23 February 2011 (UTC)

TA's comments: You're almost there. You got the transform of the cosine right. However, regarding the time shift property, you still have some mistake in it. Try first to identify what is $ t_0 $ equal to in this case.
Instructor's hint: this has to do with cascading a time shift and a time scaling. Recall that the order of the operation is relevant.-pm

Answer 3

Instructor's suggestion: how about writing this as a linear combination of two complex exponentials, and then "guessing" the right transform for each exponential separately (pulling out the constants using linearity of the Fourier transform)? -pm

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